I.
The Primitive View of Women—As a Supernatural Element in Life—As
Peculiarly Embodying the Sexual Instinct—The Modern Tendency to
Underestimate the Sexual Impulse in Women—This Tendency Confined to
Recent Times—Sexual Anæsthesia—Its Prevalence—Difficulties in
Investigating the Subject—Some Attempts to Investigate it—Sexual
Anesthesia must be Regarded as Abnormal—The Tendency to Spontaneous
Manifestations of the Sexual Impulse in Young Girls at Puberty.
From very early times it seems possible to trace two streams of opinion
regarding women: on the one hand, a tendency to regard women as a
supernatural element in life, more or less superior to men, and, on the
other hand, a tendency to regard women as especially embodying the sexual
instinct and as peculiarly prone to exhibit its manifestations.
In the most primitive societies, indeed, the two views seem to be to some
extent amalgamated; or, it should rather be said, they have not yet been
differentiated; and, as in such societies it is usual to venerate the
generative principle of nature and its embodiments in the human body and
in human functions, such a co-ordination of ideas is entirely rational.
But with the development of culture the tendency is for this homogeneous
conception to be split up into two inharmonious tendencies. Even apart
from Christianity and before its advent this may be noted. It was,
however, to Christianity and the Christian ascetic spirit that we owe the
complete differentiation and extreme development which these opposing
views have reached. The condemnation of sexuality involved the
glorification of the virgin; and indifference, even contempt, was felt for
the woman who exercised sexual functions. It remained open to anyone,
according to his own temperament, to identify the typical average woman
with the one or with the other type; all the fund of latent sexual emotion
which no ascetic rule can crush out of the human heart assured the
picturesque idealization alike of the angelic and the diabolic types of
woman. We may trace the same influence subtly lurking even in the most
would-be scientific statements of anthropologists and physicians
today.[156]
It may not be out of place to recall at this point, once more,
the fact, fairly obvious indeed, that the judgments of men
concerning women are very rarely matters of cold scientific
observation, but are colored both by their own sexual emotions
and by their own moral attitude toward the sexual impulse. The
ascetic who is unsuccessfully warring with his own carnal
impulses may (like the voluptuary) see nothing in women but
incarnations of sexual impulse; the ascetic who has subdued his
own carnal impulses may see no elements of sex in women at all.
Thus the opinions regarding this matter are not only tinged by
elements of primitive culture, but by elements of individual
disposition. Statements about the sexual impulses of women often
tell us less about women than about the persons who make them.
The curious manner in which for men women become incarnations of
the sexual impulse is shown by the tendency of both general and
personal names for women to become applicable to prostitutes
only. This is the case with the words "garce" and "fille" in
French, "Mädchen" and "Dirne" in German, as well as with the
French "catin" (Catherine) and the German "Metze" (Mathilde).
(See, e.g., R. Kleinpaul, Die Räthsel der Sprache, 1890, pp.
197-198.)
At the same time, though we have to recognize the presence of
elements which color and distort in various ways the judgments of
men regarding women, it must not be hastily assumed that these
elements render discussion of the question altogether
unprofitable. In most cases such prejudices lead chiefly to a
one-sided solution of facts, against which we can guard.
While, however, these two opposing currents of opinion are of very ancient
origin, it is only within quite recent times, and only in two or three
countries, that they have led to any marked difference of opinion
regarding the sexual aptitude of women. In ancient times men blamed women
for concupiscence or praised them for chastity, but it seems to have been
reserved for the nineteenth century to state that women are apt to be
congenitally incapable of experiencing complete sexual satisfaction, and
peculiarly liable to sexual anesthesia. This idea appears to have been
almost unknown to the eighteenth century. During the last century,
however, and more especially in England, Germany, and Italy, this opinion
has been frequently set down, sometimes even as a matter of course, with a
tincture of contempt or pity for any woman afflicted with sexual emotions.
In the treatise On Generation (chapter v), which until recent
times was commonly ascribed to Hippocrates, it is stated that men
have greater pleasure in coitus than women, though the pleasure
of women lasts longer, and this opinion, though not usually
accepted, was treated with great respect by medical authors down
to the end of the seventeenth century. Thus A. Laurentius (Du
Laurens), after a long discussion, decides that men have stronger
sexual desire and greater pleasure in coitus than women.
(Historia Anatomica Humani Corporis, 1599, lib. viii, quest, ii
and vii.)
About half a century ago a book entitled Functions and Disorders
of the Reproductive Organs, by W. Acton, a surgeon, passed
through many editions and was popularly regarded as a standard
authority on the subjects with which it deals. This extraordinary
book is almost solely concerned with men; the author evidently
regards the function of reproduction as almost exclusively
appertaining to men. Women, if "well brought up," are, and should
be, he states, in England, absolutely ignorant of all matters
concerning it. "I should say," this author again remarks, "that
the majority of women (happily for society) are not very much
troubled with sexual feeling of any kind." The supposition that
women do possess sexual feelings he considers "a vile aspersion."
In the article "Generation," contained in another medical work
belonging to the middle of the nineteenth century,—Rees's
Cyclopedia,—we find the following statement: "That a mucous
fluid is sometimes found in coition from the internal organs and
vagina is undoubted; but this only happens in lascivious women,
or such as live luxuriously."
Gall had stated decisively that the sexual desires of men are
stronger and more imperious than those of women. (Fonctions du
Cerveau, 1825, vol. iii, pp. 241-271.)
Raciborski declared that three-fourths of women merely endure the
approaches of men. (De la Puberté chez la Femme, 1844, p. 486.)
"When the question is carefully inquired into and without
prejudice," said Lawson Tait, "it is found that women have their
sexual appetites far less developed than men." (Lawson Tait,
"Remote Effects of Removal of the Uterine Appendages,"
Provincial Medical Journal, May, 1891.) "The sexual instinct is
very powerful in man and comparatively weak in women," he stated
elsewhere (Diseases of Women, 1889, p. 60).
Hammond stated that, leaving prostitutes out of consideration, it
is doubtful if in one-tenth of the instances of intercourse they
[women] experience the slightest pleasurable sensation from first
to last (Hammond, Sexual Impotence, p. 300), and he considered
(p. 281) that this condition was sometimes congenital.
Lombroso and Ferrero consider that sexual sensibility, as well as
all other forms of sensibility, is less pronounced in women, and
they bring forward various facts and opinions which seem to them
to point in the same direction. "Woman is naturally and
organically frigid." At the same time they consider that, while
erethism is less, sexuality is greater than in men. (Lombroso and
Ferrero, La Donna Delinquente, la Prostituta, e la Donna
Normale, 1893, pp. 54-58.)
"It is an altogether false idea," Fehling declared, in his
rectorial address at the University of Basel in 1891, "that a
young woman has just as strong an impulse to the opposite sex as
a young man.... The appearance of the sexual side in the love of
a young girl is pathological." (H. Fehling, Die Bestimmung der
Frau, 1892, p. 18.) In his Lehrbuch der Frauenkrankheiten the
same gynecological authority states his belief that half of all
women are not sexually excitable.
Krafft-Ebing was of opinion that women require less sexual
satisfaction than men, being less sensual. (Krafft-Ebing, "Ueber
Neurosen und Psychosen durch sexuelle Abstinenz," Jahrbücher für
Psychiatrie, 1888, Bd. viii, ht. I and 2.)
"In the normal woman, especially of the higher social classes,"
states Windscheid, "the sexual instinct is acquired, not inborn;
when it is inborn, or awakes by itself, there is abnormality.
Since women do not know this instinct before marriage, they do
not miss it when they have no occasion in life to learn it." (F.
Windscheid, "Die Beziehungen zwischen Gynäkologie und
Neurologie," Zentralblatt für Gynäkologie, 1896, No. 22; quoted
by. Moll, Libido Sexualis, Bd. i, p. 271.)
"The sensuality of men," Moll states, "is in my opinion very much
greater than that of women." (A. Moll, Die Konträre
Sexualempfindung, third edition, 1899, p. 592.)
"Women are, in general, less sensual than men," remarks Näcke,
"notwithstanding the alleged greater nervous supply of their
sexual organs." (P. Näcke, "Kritisches zum Kapitel der
Sexualität," Archiv für Psychiatrie, 1899, p. 341.)
Löwenfeld states that in normal young girls the specifically
sexual feelings are absolutely unknown; so that desire cannot
exist in them. Putting aside the not inconsiderable proportion of
women in whom this absence of desire may persist and be
permanent, even after sexual relationships have begun, thus
constituting absolute frigidity, in a still larger number desire
remains extremely moderate, constituting a state of relative
frigidity. He adds that he cannot unconditionally support the
view of Fürbringer, who is inclined to ascribe sexual coldness to
the majority of German married women. (L. Löwenfeld, Sexualleben
und Nervenleiden, 1899, second edition, p. 11.)
Adler, who discusses the question at some length, decides that
the sexual needs of women are less than those of men, though in
some cases the orgasm in quantity and quality greatly exceeds
that of men. He believes, not only that the sexual impulse in
women is absolutely less than in men, and requires stronger
stimulation to arouse it, but that also it suffers from a latency
due to inhibition, which acts like a foreign body in the brain
(analogous to the psychic trauma of Breuer and Freud in
hysteria), and demands great skill in the man who is to awaken
the woman to love. (O. Adler, Die Mangelhafte
Geschlechtsempfindung des Weibes, 1904, pp. 47, 126 et seq.;
also enlarged second edition, 1911; id., "Die Frigide Frau,"
Sexual-Probleme, Jan., 1912.)
It must not, however, be supposed that this view of the natural tendency
of women to frigidity has everywhere found acceptance. It is not only an
opinion of very recent growth, but is confined, on the whole, to a few
countries.
"Turn to history," wrote Brierre de Boismont, "and on every page
you will be able to recognize the predominance of erotic ideas in
women." It is the same today, he adds, and he attributes it to
the fact that men are more easily able to gratify their sexual
impulses. (Des Hallucinations, 1862, p. 431.)
The laws of Manu attribute to women concupiscence and anger, the
love of bed and of adornment.
The Jews attributed to women greater sexual desire than to men.
This is illustrated, according to Knobel (as quoted by Dillmann),
by Genesis, chapter iii, v. 16.
In Greek antiquity the romance and sentiment of love were mainly
felt toward persons of the same sex, and were divorced from the
more purely sexual feelings felt for persons of opposite sex.
Theognis compared marriage to cattle-breeding. In love between
men and women the latter were nearly always regarded as taking
the more active part. In all Greek love-stories of early date the
woman falls in love with the man, and never the reverse. Æschylus
makes even a father assume that his daughters will misbehave if
left to themselves. Euripides emphasized the importance of women;
"The Euripidean woman who 'falls in love' thinks first of all:
'How can I seduce the man I love?"' (E. F. M. Benecke, Antimachus
of Colophon and the Position of Women in Greek Poetry, 1896, pp.
34, 54.)
The most famous passage in Latin literature as to the question of
whether men or women obtain greater pleasure from sexual
intercourse is that in which Ovid narrates the legend of Tiresias
(Metamorphoses, iii, 317-333). Tiresias, having been both a man
and a woman, decided in favor of women. This passage was
frequently quoted down to the eighteenth century.
In a passage quoted from a lost work of Galen by the Arabian
biographer, Abu-l-Faraj, that great physician says of the
Christians "that they practice celibacy, that even many of their
women do so." So that in Galen's opinion it was more difficult
for a woman than for a man to be continent.
The same view is widely prevalent among Arabic authors, and there
is an Arabic saying that "The longing of the woman for the penis
is greater than that of the man for the vulva."
In China, remarks Dr. Coltman, "when an old gentleman of my
acquaintance was visiting me my little daughter, 5 years old, ran
into the room, and, climbing upon my knee, kissed me. My visitor
expressed his surprise, and remarked: 'We never kiss our
daughters when they are so large; we may when they are very
small, but not after they are 3 years old,' said he, 'because it
is apt to excite in them bad emotions.'" (Coltman, The Chinese,
1900, p. 99.)
The early Christian Fathers clearly show that they regard women
as more inclined to sexual enjoyment than men. That was, for
instance, the opinion of Tertullian (De Virginibus Velandis,
chapter x), and it is clearly implied in some of St. Jerome's
epistles.
Notwithstanding the influence of Christianity, among the vigorous
barbarian races of medieval Europe, the existence of sexual
appetite in women was not considered to be, as it later became, a
matter to be concealed or denied. Thus in 1068 the ecclesiastical
historian, Ordericus Vitalis (himself half Norman and half
English), narrates that the wives of the Norman knights who had
accompanied William the Conqueror to England two years earlier
sent over to their husbands to say that they were consumed by the
fierce names of desire ("sæva libidinis face urebantur"), and
that if their husbands failed to return very shortly they
proposed to take other husbands. It is added that this threat
brought a few husbands back to their wanton ladies ("lascivis
dominabus suis").
During the medieval period in Europe, largely in consequence, no
doubt, of the predominance of ascetic ideals set up by men who
naturally regarded woman as the symbol of sex, the doctrine of
the incontinence of woman became firmly fixed, and it is
unnecessary and unprofitable to quote examples. It is sufficient
to mention the very comprehensive statement of Jean de Meung (in
the Roman de la Rose, 9903):—
"Toutes estes, serés, ou fûtes De fait ou de volunté putes."
The satirical Jean de Meung was, however, a somewhat extreme and
untypical representative of his age, and the fourteenth century
Johannes de Sancto Amando (Jean de St. Amand) gives a somewhat
more scientifically based opinion (quoted by Pagel, Neue
litterarische Beiträge zur Mittelalterlichen Medicin, 1896, p.
30) that sexual desire is stronger in women than in men.
Humanism and the spread of the Renaissance movement brought in a
spirit more sympathetic to women. Soon after, especially in Italy
and France, we begin to find attempts at analyzing the sexual
emotions, which are not always without a certain subtlety. In the
seventeenth century a book of this kind was written by Venette.
In matters of love, Venette declared, "men are but children
compared to women. In these matters women have a more lively
imagination, and they usually have more leisure to think of love.
Women are much more lascivious and amorous than men." This is the
conclusion reached in a chapter devoted to the question whether
men or women are the more amorous. In a subsequent chapter,
dealing with the question whether men or women receive more
pleasure from the sexual embrace, Venette concludes, after
admitting the great difficulty of the question, that man's
pleasure is greater, but woman's lasts longer. (N. Venette, De
la Génération de l'Homme ou Tableau de l'Amour Conjugal,
Amsterdam, 1688.)
At a much earlier date, however, Montaigne had discussed this
matter with his usual wisdom, and, while pointing out that men
have imposed their own rule of life on women and their own
ideals, and have demanded from them opposite and contradictory
virtues,—a statement not yet antiquated,—he argues that women
are incomparably more apt and more ardent in love than men are,
and that in this matter they always know far more than men can
teach them, for "it is a discipline that is born in their veins."
(Montaigne, Essais, book iii, chapter v.)
The old physiologists generally mentioned the appearance of
sexual desire in girls as one of the normal signs of puberty.
This may be seen in the numerous quotations brought together by
Schurig, in his Parthenologia, cap. ii.
A long succession of distinguished physicians throughout the
seventeenth century discussed at more or less length the relative
amount of sexual desire in men and women, and the relative degree
of their pleasure in coitus. It is remarkable that, although they
usually attach great weight to the supposed opinion of
Hippocrates in the opposite sense, most of them decide that both
desire and pleasure are greater in women.
Plazzonus decides that women have more sources of pleasure in
coitus than men because of the larger extent of surface excited;
and if it were not so, he adds, women would not be induced to
incur the pains and risks of pregnancy and childbirth.
(Plazzonus, De Partibus Generationi Inservientibus, 1621, lib.
ii, cap. xiii.)
"Without doubt," says Ferrand, "woman is more passionate than
man, and more often torn by the evils of love." (Ferrand, De la
Maladie d'Amour, 1623, chapter ii.)
Zacchia, mainly on a priori grounds, concludes that women have
more pleasure in coitus than men. (Zacchia, Quæstiones
Medico-legales, 1630, lib. iii, quest, vii.)
Sinibaldus, discussing whether men or women have more salacity,
decides in favor of women. (J. B. Sinibaldus, Geneanthropeia,
1642, lib. ii, tract. ii, cap. v.)
Hornius believed that women have greater sexual pleasure than
men, though he mainly supported his opinion by the authority of
classical poets. (Hornius, Historic Naturalis, 1670, lib. iii,
cap. i.)
Nenter describes what we may now call women's affectability, and
considers that it makes them more prone than men to the sexual
emotions, as is shown by the fact that, notwithstanding their
modesty, they sometimes make sexual advances. This greater
proneness of women to the sexual impulse is, he remarks, entirely
natural and right, for the work of generation is mainly carried
on by women, and love is its basis: "generationis fundamentum est
amor." (G. P. Nenter, Theoria Hominis Sani, 1714, cap. v, memb.
ii.)
The above opinions of seventeenth-century physicians are quoted
from the original sources. Schurig, in his Gynæcologia, (pp.
46-50 and 71-81), quotes a number of passages on this subject
from medical authorities of the same period, on which I have not
drawn.
Sénancour, in his fine and suggestive book on love, first
published in 1806, asks: "Has sexual pleasure the same power on
the sex which less loudly demands it? It has more, at all events
in some respects. The very vigor and laboriousness of men may
lead them to neglect love, but the constant cares of maternity
make women feel how important it must ever be to them. We must
remember also that in men the special emotions of love only have
a single focus, while in women the organs of lactation are united
to those of conception. Our feelings are all determined by these
material causes." (Sénancour, De l'Amour, fourth edition, 1834,
vol. i, p. 68.) A later psychologist of love, this time a woman,
Ellen Key, states that woman's erotic demands, though more
silent than man's, are stronger. (Ellen Key, Ueber Liebe und
Ehe, p. 138.)
Michael Ryan considered that sexual enjoyment "is more delicious
and protracted" in women, and ascribed this to a more sensitive
nervous system, a finer and more delicate skin, more acute
feelings, and the fact that in women the mammæ are the seat of a
vivid sensibility in sympathy with the uterus. (M. Ryan,
Philosophy of Marriage, 1837, p. 153.)
Busch was inclined to think women have greater sexual pleasure
than men. (D. W. H. Busch, Das Geschlechtsleben des Weibes, 1839,
vol. i, p. 69.) Kobelt held that the anatomical conformation of
the sexual organs in women led to the conclusion that this must
be the case.
Guttceit, speaking of his thirty years' medical experience in
Russia, says: "In Russia at all events, a girl, as very many have
acknowledged to me, cannot resist the ever stronger impulses of
sex beyond the twenty-second or twenty-third year. And if she
cannot do so in natural ways she adopts artificial ways. The
belief that the feminine sex feels the stimulus of sex less than
the male is quite false." (Guttceit, Dreissig Jahre Praxis,
1873, theil i, p. 313.)
In Scandinavia, according to Vedeler, the sexual emotions are at
least as strong in women as in men (Vedeler, "De Impotentia
Feminarum," Norsk Magazin for Laegevidenskaben, March, 1894).
In Sweden, Dr. Eklund, of Stockholm, remarking that from 25 to 33
per cent. of the births are illegitimate, adds: "We hardly ever
hear anyone talk of a woman having been seduced, simply because
the lust is at the worst in the woman, who, as a rule, is the
seducing party." (Eklund, Transactions of the American
Association of Obstetricians, Philadelphia, 1892, p. 307.)
On the opposite side of the Baltic, in the Königsberg district,
the same observation has been made. Intercourse before marriage
is the rule in most villages of this agricultural district, among
the working classes, with or without intention of subsequent
marriage; "the girls are often the seducing parties, or at least
very willing; they seek to bind their lovers to them and compel
them to marriage." In the Köslin district of Pomerania, where
intercourse between the girls and youths is common, the girls
come to the youths' rooms even more frequently than the youths to
the girls'. In some of the Dantzig districts the girls give
themselves to the youths, and even seduce them, sometimes, but
not always, with a view of marriage. (Wittenberg, Die
geschlechtsittlichen Verhalten der Landbewohner im Deutschen
Reiche, 1895, Bd. i, pp. 47, 61, 83.)
Mantegazza devoted great attention to this point in several of
the works he published during fifty years, and was decidedly of
the opinion that the sexual emotions are much stronger in women
than in men, and that women have much more enjoyment in sexual
intercourse. In his Fisiologia del Piacere he supports this
view, and refers to the greater complexity of the genital
apparatus in women (as well as its larger surface and more
protected position), to what he considers to be the keener
sensibility of women generally, to the passivity of women, etc.;
and he considers that sexual pleasure is rendered more seductive
to women by the mystery in which it is veiled for them by modesty
and our social habits. In a more recent work (Fisiologia della
Donna, cap. viii) Mantegazza returns to this subject, and
remarks that long experience, while confirming his early opinion,
has modified it to the extent that he now believes that, as
compared with men, the sexual emotions of women vary within far
wider limits. Among men few are quite insensitive to the physical
pleasures of love, while, on the other hand, few are thrown by
the violence of its emotional manifestations into a state of
syncope or convulsions. Among women, while some are absolutely
insensitive, others (as in cases with which he was acquainted)
are so violently excited by the paradise of physical love that,
after the sexual embrace, they faint or fall into a cataleptic
condition for several hours.
"Physical sex is a larger factor in the life of the woman.... If
this be true of the physical element, it is equally true of the
mental element." (Dr. Elizabeth Blackwell, The Human Element in
Sex, fifth edition, 1894, p. 47.)
"In the female sex," remarks Clouston, "reproduction is a more
dominant function of the organism than in the male, and has far
larger, if not more intense, relationships to feeling, judgment,
and volition." (Clouston, Neuroses of Development, 1891.)
"It may be said," Marro states, "that in woman the visceral
system reacts, if not with greater intensity, certainly in a more
general manner, to all the impressions, having a sexual basis,
which dominate the life of woman, if not as sexual emotions
properly so called, as related emotions closely dependent on the
reproductive instinct." (A. Marro, La Pubertà, 1898, p. 233.)
Forel also believed (Die Sexuelle Frage, p. 274) that women are
more erotic than men.
The gynecologist Kisch states his belief that "The sexual impulse
is so powerful in women that at certain periods of life its
primitive force dominates her whole nature, and there can be no
room left for reason to argue concerning reproduction; on the
contrary, union is desired even in the presence of the fear of
reproduction or when there can be no question of it." He regards
absence of sexual feeling in women as pathological. (Kisch,
Sterilität des Weibes, second edition, pp. 205-206.) In his
later work (The Sexual Life of Woman) Kisch again asserts that
sexual impulse always exists in mature women (in the absence of
organic sexual defect and cerebral disease), though it varies in
strength and may be repressed. In adolescent girls, however, it
is weaker than in youths of the same age. After she has had
sexual experiences, Kisch maintains, a woman's sexual emotions
are just as powerful as a man's, though she has more motives than
a man for controlling them.
Eulenburg is of the same opinion as Kisch, and sharply criticises
the loose assertion of some authorities who have expressed
themselves in an opposite sense. (A. Eulenburg, Sexuale
Neuropathie, pp. 88-90; the same author has dealt with the point
in the Zukunft, December 2, 1893.)
Kossmann states that the opinion as to the widespread existence
of frigidity among women is a fable. (Kossmann, Allgemeine
Gynæcologie, 1903, p. 362.)
Bloch concludes that "in most cases the sexual coldness of women
is in fact only apparent, either due to the concealment of
glowing sexuality beneath the veil of outward reticence
prescribed by conventional morality, or else to the husband who
has not succeeded in arousing erotic sensations which are
complicated and with difficulty awakened.... The sexual
sensibility of women is certainly different from that of men, but
in strength it is at least as great." (Iwan Bloch, Das
Sexualleben unserer Zeit 1907, ch. v.)
Nyström, also, after devoting a chapter to the discussion of the
causes of sexual coldness in women, concludes: "My conviction,
founded on experience, is, that only a small number of women
would be without sexual feeling if sound views and teaching
prevailed in respect to the sexual life, if due weight were given
to inner devotion and tender caresses as the preliminaries of
love in marriage, and if couples who wish to avoid pregnancy
would adopt sensible preventive methods instead of coitus
interruptus." (A. Nyström, Das Geschlichtsleben und seine
Gesetze, eighth edition, 1907, p. 177.)
We thus find two opinions widely current: one, of world-wide existence and
almost universally accepted in those ages and centers in which life is
lived most nakedly, according to which the sexual impulse is stronger in
women than in men; another, now widely prevalent in many countries,
according to which the sexual instinct is distinctly weaker in women, if,
indeed, it may not be regarded as normally absent altogether. A third view
is possible: it may be held that there is no difference at all. This
view, formerly not very widely held, is that of the French physiologist,
Beaunis, as it is of Winckel; while Rohleder, who formerly held that
sexual feeling tends to be defective in women, now believes that men and
women are equal in sexual impulse.
At an earlier period, however, Donatus (De Medica Historia
Mirabili, 1613, lib. iv, cap. xvii) held the same view, and
remarked that sometimes men and sometimes women are the more
salacious, varying with the individual. Roubaud (De
l'Impuissance, 1855, p. 38) stated that the question is so
difficult as to be insoluble.
In dealing with the characteristics of the sexual impulse in women, it
will be seen, we have to consider the prevalence in them of what is
commonly termed (in its slightest forms) frigidity or hyphedonia, and (in
more complete form) sexual anesthesia or anaphrodism, or erotic blindness,
or anhedonia.[157]
Many modern writers have referred to the prevalence of frigidity
among women. Shufeldt believes (Pacific Medical Journal, Nov.,
1907) that 75 per cent, of married women in New York are
afflicted with sexual frigidity, and that it is on the increase;
it is rare, however, he adds, among Jewish women. Hegar gives 50
per cent, as the proportion of sexually anesthetic women;
Fürbringer says the majority of women are so. Effertz (quoted by
Löwenfeld, Sexualleben und Nervenleiden, p. 11, apparently with
approval) regards 10 per cent, among women generally as sexually
anesthetic, but only 1 per cent, men. Moll states (Eulenburg's
Encyclopädie, fourth edition, art. "Geschlechtstrieb") that the
prevalence of sexual anesthesia among German women varies,
according to different authorities, from 10 to 66 per cent.
Elsewhere Moll (Konträre Sexualempfindung, third edition, 1890,
p. 510) emphasizes the statement that "sexual anesthesia in women
is much more frequent than is generally supposed." He explains
that he is referring to the physical element of pleasure and
satisfaction in intercourse, and of desire for intercourse. He
adds that the psychic side of love is often more conspicuous in
women than in men. He cannot agree with Sollier that this kind of
sexual frigidity is a symptom of hysteria. Féré (L'Instinct
Sexuel, second edition, p. 112), in referring to the greater
frequency of sexual anesthesia in women, remarks that it is often
associated with neuropathic states, as well as with anomalies of
the genital organs, or general troubles of nutrition, and is
usually acquired. Some authors attribute great importance to
amenorrhea in this connection; one investigator has found that in
4 out of 14 cases of absolute amenorrhea sexual feeling was
absent. Löwenfeld, again (Sexualleben und Nervenleiden),
referring to the common misconception that nervous disorder is
associated with increased sexual desire, points out that
nervously degenerate women far more often display frigidity than
increased sexual desire. Elsewhere (Ueber die Sexuelle
Konstitution) Löwenfeld says it is only among the upper classes
that sexual anesthesia is common. Campbell Clark, also, showed
some years ago that, in young women with a tendency to chlorosis
and a predisposition to insanity, defects of pelvic and mammary
development are very prevalent. (Journal of Mental Science,
October, 1888.)
As regards the older medical authors, Schurig (Spermatologia,
1720, p. 243, and Gynæcologia, 1730, p. 81) brought together
from the literature and from his own knowledge cases of women who
felt no pleasure in coitus, as well as of some men who had
erections without pleasure.
There is, however, much uncertainty as to what precisely is meant by
sexual frigidity or anesthesia. All the old medical authors carefully
distinguish between the heat of sexual desire and the actual presence of
pleasure in coitus; many modern writers also properly separate libido
from voluptas, since it is quite possible to experience sexual desires
and not to be able to obtain their gratification during sexual
intercourse, and it is possible to hold, with Mantegazza, that women
naturally have stronger sexual impulses than men, but are more liable than
men to experience sexual anesthesia. But it is very much more difficult
than most people seem to suppose, to obtain quite precise and definite
data concerning the absence of either voluptas or libido in a woman.
Even if we accept the statement of the woman who asserts that she has
either or both, the statement of their absence is by no means equally
conclusive and final. As even Adler—who discusses this question fully and
has very pronounced opinions about it—admits, there are women who stoutly
deny the existence of any sexual feelings until such feelings are
actually discovered.[158] Some of the most marked characteristics of the
sexual impulse in women, moreover,—its association with modesty, its
comparatively late development, its seeming passivity, its need of
stimulation,—all combine to render difficult the final pronouncement that
a woman is sexually frigid. Most significant of all in this connection is
the complexity of the sexual apparatus in women and the corresponding
psychic difficulty—based on the fundamental principle of sexual
selection—of finding a fitting mate. The fact that a woman is cold with
one man or even with a succession of men by no means shows that she is not
apt to experience sexual emotions; it merely shows that these men have not
been able to arouse them. "I recall two very striking cases," a
distinguished gynecologist, the late Dr. Engelmann, of Boston, wrote to
me, "of very attractive young married women—one having had a child, the
other a miscarriage—who were both absolutely cold to their husbands, as
told me by both husband and wife. They could not understand desire or
passion, and would not even believe that it existed. Yet, both these women
with other men developed ardent passion, all the stronger perhaps because
it had been so long latent." In such cases it is scarcely necessary to
invoke Adler's theory of a morbid inhibition, or "foreign body in
consciousness," which has to be overcome. We are simply in the presence of
the natural fact that the female throughout nature not only requires much
loving, but is usually fastidious in the choice of a lover. In the human
species this natural fact is often disguised and perverted. Women are not
always free to choose the man whom they would prefer as a lover, nor even
free to find out whether the man they prefer sexually fits them; they are,
moreover, very often extremely ignorant of the whole question of sex, and
the victims of the prejudice and false conventions they have been taught.
On the one hand, they are driven into an unnatural primness and austerity;
on the other hand, they rebound to an equally unnatural facility or even
promiscuity. Thus it happens that the men who find that a large number of
women are not so facile as they themselves are, and as they have found a
large number of women to be, rush to the conclusion that women tend to be
"sexually anesthetic." If we wish to be accurate, it is very doubtful
whether we can assert that a woman is ever absolutely without the aptitude
for sexual satisfaction.[159] She may unquestionably be without any
conscious desire for actual coitus. But if we realize to how large an
extent woman is a sexual organism, and how diffused and even unconscious
the sexual impulses may be, it becomes very difficult to assert that she
has never shown any manifestation of the sexual impulse. All we can assert
with some degree of positiveness in some cases is that she has not
manifested sexual gratification, more particularly as shown by the
occurrence of the orgasm, but that is very far indeed from warranting us
to assert that she never will experience such gratification or still less
that she is organically incapable of experiencing it.[160] It is therefore
quite impossible to follow Adler when he asks us to accept the existence
of a condition which he solemnly terms anæsthesia sexualis completa
idiopathica, in which there is no mechanical difficulty in the way or
psychic inhibition, but an "absolute" lack of sexual sensibility and a
complete absence of sexual inclination.[161]
It is instructive to observe that Adler himself knows no "pure" case of
this condition. To find such a case he has to go back nearly two centuries
to Madame de Warens, to whom he devotes a whole chapter. He has,
moreover, had the courage in writing this chapter to rely entirely on
Rousseau's Confessions, which were written nearly half a century later
than the episodes they narrated, and are therefore full of inaccuracies,
besides being founded on an imperfect and false knowledge of Madame de
Warens's earlier life, and written by a man who was, there can be no
doubt, not able to arouse women's passions. Adler shows himself completely
ignorant of the historical investigations of De Montet, Mugnier, Ritter,
and others which, during recent years, have thrown a flood of light on the
life and character of Madame de Warens, and not even acquainted with the
highly significant fact that she was hysterical.[162] This is the basis of
"fact" on which we are asked to accept anæsthesia sexualis completa
idiopathica![163]
"In dealing with the alleged absence of the sexual impulse," a
well-informed medical correspondent writes from America, "much
caution has to be used in accepting statements as to its absence,
from the fact that most women fear by the admission to place
themselves in an impure category. I am also satisfied that influx
of women into universities, etc., is often due to the sexual
impulse causing restlessness, and that this factor finds
expression in the prurient prudishness so often presenting itself
in such women, which interferes with coeducation. This is
becoming especially noticeable at the University of Chicago,
where prudishness interferes with classical, biological,
sociological, and physiological discussion in the classroom.
There have been complaints by such women that a given professor
has not left out embryological facts not in themselves in any way
implying indelicacy. I have even been informed that the opinion
is often expressed in college dormitories that embryological
facts and discussions should be left out of a course intended for
both sexes." Such prudishness, it is scarcely necessary to
remark, whether found in women or men, indicates a mind that has
become morbidly sensitive to sexual impressions. For the healthy
mind embryological and allied facts have no emotionally sexual
significance, and there is, therefore, no need to shun them.
Kolischer, of Chicago ("Sexual Frigidity in Women," American
Journal of Obstetrics, Sept., 1905), points out that it is often
the failure of the husband to produce sexual excitement in the
wife which leads to voluntary repression of sexual sensation on
her part, or an acquired sexual anesthesia. "Sexual excitement,"
he remarks, "not brought to its natural climax, the reaction
leaves the woman in a very disagreeable condition, and repeated
occurrences of this kind may even lead to general nervous
disturbances. Some of these unfortunate women learn to suppress
their sexual sensation so as to avoid all these disagreeable
sequelæ. Such a state of affairs is not only unfortunate, because
it deprives the female partner of her natural rights, but it is
also to be deplored because it practically brings down such a
married woman to the level of the prostitute."
In illustration of the prevalence of inhibitions of various
kinds, from without and from within, in suppressing or disguising
sexual feeling in women, I may quote the following observations
by an American lady concerning a series of women of her
acquaintance:—
"Mrs. A. This woman is handsome and healthy. She has never had
children, much to the grief of herself and her husband. The man
is also handsome and attractive. Mrs. A. once asked me if
love-making between me and my husband ever originated with me. I
replied it was as often so as not, and she said that in that
event she could not see how passion between husband and wife
could be regulated. When I seemed not to be ashamed of the
matter, but rather to be positive in my views that it should be
so, she at once tried to impress me with the fact that she did
not wish me to think she 'could not be aroused.' This woman
several times hinted that she had learned a great amount that was
not edifying at boarding school, and I always felt that, with
proper encouragement, she would have retailed suggestive stories.
"Mrs. B. This woman lives to please her husband, who is a spoiled
man. She gave birth to a child soon after marriage, but was left
an invalid for some years. She told me coition always hurt her,
and she said it made her sick to see her husband nude. I was
therefore surprised, years afterward, to hear her say, in reply
to a remark of another person, 'Yes; women are not only as
passionate as men, I am sure they are more so.' I therefore
questioned the lack of passion she had on former occasions
avowed, or else felt convinced her improvement in health had made
intercourse pleasant.
"Miss C. A teacher. She is emotional and easily becomes
hysterical. Her life has been one of self-sacrifice and her
rearing most Puritanical. She told me she thought women did not
crave sexual satisfaction unless it had been aroused in them. I
consider her one who physically is injured by not having it.
"Mrs. D. After being married a few years this person told me she
thought intercourse 'horrid.' Some years after this, however, she
fell in love with a man not her husband, which caused their
separation. She always fancied men in love with her, and she told
me that she and her husband tried to live without intercourse,
fearing more children, but they could not do it; she also told of
trying to refrain, for the same purpose, until safe parts of the
menstrual month, but that 'was just the time she cared least for
it.' These remarks made me doubt the sincerity of the first.
"Mrs. E. said she enjoyed intercourse as well as her husband, and
she 'didn't see why she should not say so.' This same woman,
whether using a current phrase or not, afterward said her husband
'did not bother her very often.'
"Mrs. F., the mother of several children, was married to a man
she neither loved nor respected, but she said that when a strange
man touched her it made her tremble all over.
"Mrs. G., the mother of many children, divorced on account of the
dissipation, drinking and otherwise, of her husband. She is of
the creole type, but large and almost repulsive. She is a
brilliant talker and she supports herself by writing. She has
fallen in love with a number of young men, 'wildly, madly,
passionately,' as one of them told me, and I am sure she suffers
greatly from the lack of satisfaction. She would no doubt procure
it if it were possible.
"I believe," the writer concludes, "women are as passionate as
men, but the enforced restraint of years possibly smothers it.
The fear of having children and the methods to prevent conception
are, I am sure, potent factors in the injury to the emotions of
married women. Perhaps the lack of intercourse acts less
disastrously upon a woman because of the renewed feeling which
comes after each menstrual period."
As bearing on the causes which have led to the disguise and
misinterpretation of the sexual impulse in women I may quote the
following communication from another lady:—
"I do think the coldness of women has been greatly exaggerated.
Men's theoretically ideal woman (though they don't care so much
about it in practice) is passionless, and women are afraid to
admit that they have any desire for sexual pleasure. Rousseau,
who was not very straight-laced, excuses the conduct of Madame de
Warens on the ground that it was not the result of passion: an
aggravation rather than a palliation of the offense, if society
viewed it from the point of view of any other fault. Even in the
modern novels written by the 'new woman' the longing for
maternity, always an honorable sentiment, is dragged in to veil
the so-called 'lower' desire. That some women, at any rate, have
very strong passions and that great suffering is entailed by
their repression is not, I am sure, sufficiently recognized, even
by women themselves.
"Besides the 'passionless ideal' which checks their sincerity,
there are many causes which serve to disguise a woman's feelings
to herself and make her seem to herself colder than she really
is. Briefly these are:—
"1. Unrecognized disease of the reproductive organs, especially
after the birth of children. A friend of mine lamented to me her
inability to feel pleasure, though she had done so before the
birth of her child, then 3 years old. With considerable
difficulty I persuaded her to see a doctor, who told her all the
reproductive organs were seriously congested; so that for three
years she had lived in ignorance and regret for her husband's
sake and her own.
"2. The dread of recommencing, once having suffered them, all the
pains and discomforts of child-bearing.
"3. Even when precautions are taken, much bother and anxiety is
involved, which has a very dampening effect on excitement.
"4. The fact that men will never take any trouble to find out
what specially excites a woman. A woman, as a rule, is at some
pains to find out the little things which particularly affect the
man she loves,—it may be a trick of speech, a rose in her hair,
or what not,—and she makes use of her knowledge. But do you know
one man who will take the same trouble? (It is difficult to
specify, as what pleases one person may not another. I find that
the things that affect me personally are the following: [a]
Admiration for a man's mental capacity will translate itself
sometimes into direct physical excitement. [b] Scents of white
flowers, like tuberose or syringa. [c] The sight of fireflies.
[d] The idea or the reality of suspension. [e] Occasionally
absolute passivity.)
"5. The fact that many women satisfy their husbands when
themselves disinclined. This is like eating jam when one does not
fancy it, and has a similar effect. It is a great mistake, in my
opinion, to do so, except very rarely. A man, though perhaps
cross at the time, prefers, I believe, to gratify himself a few
times, when the woman also enjoys it, to many times when she does
not.
"6. The masochistic tendency of women, or their desire for
subjection to the man they love. I believe no point in the whole
question is more misunderstood than this. Nearly every man
imagines that to secure a woman's love and respect he must give
her her own way in small things, and compel her obedience in
great ones. Every man who desires success with a woman should
exactly reverse that theory."
When we are faced by these various and often conflicting statements of
opinion it seems necessary to obtain, if possible, a definite basis of
objective fact. It would be fairly obvious in any case, and it becomes
unquestionable in view of the statements I have brought together, that the
best-informed and most sagacious clinical observers, when giving an
opinion on a very difficult and elusive subject which they have not
studied with any attention and method, are liable to make unguarded
assertions; sometimes, also, they become the victims of ethical or
pseudoethical prejudices, so as to be most easily influenced by that class
of cases which happens to fit in best with their prepossessions.[164] In
order to reach any conclusions on a reasonable basis it is necessary to
take a series of unselected individuals and to ascertain carefully the
condition of the sexual impulse in each.
At present, however, this is extremely difficult to do at all
satisfactorily, and quite impossible, indeed, to do in a manner likely to
yield absolutely unimpeachable results. Nevertheless, a few series of
observations have been made. Thus, Dr. Harry Campbell[165] records the
result of an investigation, carried on in his hospital practice, of 52
married women of the poorer class; they were not patients, but ordinary,
healthy working-class women, and the inquiry was not made directly, but of
the husbands, who were patients. Sexual instinct was said to be present in
12 cases before marriage, and absent in 40; in 13 of the 40 it never
appeared at all; so that it altogether appeared in 39, or in the ratio of
something over 75 per cent. Among the 12 in whom it existed before
marriage it was said to have appeared in most with puberty; in 3, however,
a few years before puberty, and in 2 a few years later. In 2 of those in
whom it appeared before puberty, menstruation began late; in the third it
rose almost to nymphomania on the day preceding the first menstruation.
In nearly all the cases desire was said to be stronger in the husband than
in the wife; when it was stronger in the wife, the husband was
exceptionally indifferent. Of the 13 in whom desire was absent after
marriage, 5 had been married for a period under two years, and Campbell
remarks that it would be wrong to conclude that it would never develop in
these cases, for in this group of cases the appearance of sexual instinct
was sometimes a matter of days, sometimes of years, after the date of
marriage. In two-thirds of the cases there was a diminution of desire,
usually gradual, at the climacteric; in the remaining third there was
either no change or exaltation of desire. The most important general
result, Campbell concludes, is that "the sexual instinct is very much less
intense in woman than in man," and to this he elsewhere adds a corollary
that "the sexual instinct in the civilized woman is, I believe, tending to
atrophy."
An eminent gynecologist, the late Dr. Matthews Duncan, has (in his work on
Sterility in Women) presented a table which, although foreign to this
subject, has a certain bearing on the matter. Matthews Duncan, believing
that the absence of sexual desire and of sexual pleasure in coitus are
powerful influences working for sterility, noted their presence or absence
in a number of cases, and found that, among 191 sterile women between the
ages of 15 and 45, 152, or 79 per cent., acknowledged the presence of
sexual desire; and among 196 sterile women (mostly the same cases), 134,
or 68 per cent., acknowledged the presence of sexual pleasure in coitus.
Omitting the cases over 35 years of age, which were comparatively few, the
largest proportion of affirmative answers, both as regards sexual pleasure
and sexual desire, was from between 30 and 34 years of age. Matthews
Duncan assumes that the absence of sexual desire and sexual pleasure in
women is thoroughly abnormal.[166]
An English non-medical author, in the course of a thoughtful discussion of
sexual phenomena, revealing considerable knowledge and observation,[167]
has devoted a chapter to this subject in another of its aspects. Without
attempting to ascertain the normal strength of the sexual instinct in
women, he briefly describes 11 cases of "sexual anesthesia" in Women (in 2
or 3 of which there appears, however, to be an element of latent
homosexuality) from among the circle of his own friends. This author
concludes that sexual coldness is very common among English women, and
that it involves questions of great social and ethical importance.
I have not met with any series of observations made among
seemingly healthy and normal women in other countries; there are,
however, various series of somewhat abnormal cases in which the
point was noted, and the results are not uninstructive. Thus, in
Vienna at Krafft-Ebing's psychiatric clinic, Gattel (Ueber die
sexuellen Ursachen der Neurasthenie und Angstneurose, 1898)
carefully investigated the cases of 42 women, mostly at the
height of sexual life,—i.e., between 20 and 35,—who were
suffering from slight nervous disorders, especially neurasthenia
and mild hysteria, but none of them from grave nervous or other
disease. Of these 42, at least 17 had masturbated, at one time or
another, either before or after marriage, in order to obtain
relief of sexual feelings. In the case of 4 it is stated that
they do not obtain sexual satisfaction in marriage, but in these
cases only coitus interruptus is practised, and the fact that
the absence of sexual satisfaction was complained of seems to
indicate an aptitude for experiencing it. These 4 cases can
therefore scarcely be regarded as exceptions. In all the other
cases sexual desire, sexual excitement, or sexual satisfaction is
always clearly indicated, and in a considerable proportion of
cases it is noted that the sexual impulse is very strongly
developed. This series is valuable, since the facts of the sexual
life are, as far as possible, recorded with much precision. The
significance of the facts varies, however, according to the view
taken as to the causation of neurasthenia and allied conditions
of slight nervous disorder. Gattel argues that sexual
irregularities are a peculiarly fruitful, if not invariable,
source of such disorders; according to the more commonly accepted
view this is not so. If we accept the more usual view, these
women fairly correspond to average women of lower class; if,
however, we accept Gattel's view, they may possess the sexual
instinct in a more marked degree than average women.
In a series of 116 German women in whom the operation of removing
the ovaries was performed, Pfister usually noted briefly in what
way the sexual impulse was affected by the operation ("Die
Wirkung der Castration auf den Weiblichen Organismus," Archiv
für Gynäkologie, 1898, p. 583). In 13 cases (all but 3
unmarried) the presence of sexual desire at any time was denied,
and 2 of these expressed disgust of sexual matters. In 12 cases
the point is left doubtful. In all the other cases sexual desire
had once been present, and in 2 or 3 cases it was acknowledged to
be so strong as to approach nymphomania. In about 30 of these
(not including any in which it was previously very strong) it was
extinguished by castration, in a few others it was diminished,
and in the rest unaffected. Thus, when we exclude the 12 cases in
which the point was not apparently investigated, and the 10
unmarried women, in whom it may have been latent or unavowed, we
find that, of 94 married women, 91 women acknowledged the
existence of sexual desire and only 3 denied it.
Schröter, again in Germany, has investigated the manifestations
of the sexual impulse among 402 insane women in the asylum at
Eichberg in Rheingau. ("Wird bei jungen Unverheiratheten zur Zeit
der Menstruation stärkere sexuelle Erregheit beobaehtet?"
Allgemeine Zeitschrift für Psychiatrie, vol. lvi, 1899, pp.
321-333.) There is no reason to suppose that the insane represent
a class of the community specially liable to sexual emotion,
although its manifestations may become unrestrained and
conspicuous under the influence of insanity; and at the same
time, while the appearance of such manifestations is evidence of
the aptitude for sexual emotions, their absence may be only due
to disease, seclusion, or to an intact power of self-control.
Of the 402 women, 166 were married and 236 unmarried. Schröter
divided them into four groups: (1) those below 20; (2) those
between 20 and 30; (3) those between 30 and 40; (4) those from 40
to the menopause. The patients included persons from the lowest
class of the population, and only about a quarter of them could
fairly be regarded as curable. Thus the manifestations of
sexuality were diminished, for with advance of mental disease
sexual manifestations cease to appear. Schröter only counted
those cases in which the sexual manifestations were decided and
fairly constant at the menstrual epoch; if not visibly
manifested, sexual feeling was not taken into account. Sexual
phenomena accompanied the entry of the menstrual epoch in 141
cases: i.e., in 20 (or in the proportion of 72 per cent.) of
the first group, consisting entirely of unmarried women; in 33
(or 28 per cent.) of the second group; in 55 (or 35 per cent.) of
the third group; and in 33 (or 33 per cent.) of the fourth group.
It was found that 181 patients showed no sexual phenomena at any
time, while 80 showed sexual phenomena frequently between the
menstrual epochs, but only in a slight degree, and not at all
during the period. At all ages sexual manifestations were more
prevalent among the unmarried than among the married, though this
difference became regularly and progressively less with increase
in age.
Schröter inclines to think that sexual excitement is commoner
among insane women belonging to the lower social classes than in
those belonging to the better classes. Among 184 women in a
private asylum, only 13 (6.13 per cent.) showed very marked and
constant excitement at menstrual periods. He points out, however,
that this may be due to a greater ability to restrain the
manifestations of feeling.
There is some interest in Schröter's results, though they cannot
be put on a line with inquiries made among the sane; they only
represent the prevalence of the grossest and strongest sexual
manifestations when freed from the restraints of sanity.
As a slight contribution toward the question, I have selected a series of
12 cases of women of whose sexual development I possess precise
information, with the following results: In 2 cases distinct sexual
feeling was experienced spontaneously at the age of 7 and 8, but the
complete orgasm only occurred some years after puberty; in 5 cases sexual
feeling appeared spontaneously for a few months to a year after the
appearance of menstruation, which began between 12 and 14 years of age,
usually at 13; in another case sexual feeling first appeared shortly after
menstruation began, but not spontaneously, being called out by a lover's
advances; in the remaining 4 cases sexual emotion never became definite
and conscious until adult life (the ages being 26, 27, 34, 35), in 2 cases
through being made love to, and in 2 cases through self-manipulation out
of accident or curiosity. It is noteworthy that the sexual feelings first
developed in adult life were usually as strong as those arising at
puberty. It may be added that, of these 12 women, 9 had at some time or
another masturbated (4 shortly after puberty, 5 in adult life), but,
except in 1 case, rarely and at intervals. All belong to the middle class,
2 or 3 leading easy, though not idle, lives, while all the others are
engaged in professional or other avocations often involving severe labor.
They differ widely in character and mental ability; but, while 2 or 3
might be regarded as slightly abnormal, they are all fairly healthy.
I am inclined to believe that the experiences of the foregoing group are
fairly typical of the social class to which they belong. I may, however,
bring forward another series of 35 women, varying in age from 18 to 40
(with 2 exceptions all over 25), and in every respect comparable with the
smaller group, but concerning whom my knowledge, though reliable, is
usually less precise and detailed. In this group 5 state that they have
never experienced sexual emotion, these being all unmarried and leading
strictly chaste lives; in 18 cases the sexual impulse may be described as
strong, or is so considered by the subject herself; in 9 cases it is only
moderate; in 3 it is very slight when evoked, and with difficulty evoked,
in 1 of these only appearing two years after marriage, in another the
exhaustion and worry of household cares being assigned for its comparative
absence. It is noteworthy that all the more highly intelligent, energetic
women in the series appear in the group of those with strong sexual
emotions, and also that severe mental and physical labor, even when
cultivated for this purpose, has usually had little or no influence in
relieving sexual emotion.
An American physician in the State of Connecticut sends me the
following notes concerning a series of 13 married women, taken,
as they occurred, in obstetric practice. They are in every way
respectable and moral women:—
"Mrs. A. says that her husband does not give her sufficient
sexual attention, as he fears they will have more children than
he can properly care for. Mrs. B. always enjoys intercourse; so
does Mrs. C. Mrs. D. is easily excited and very fond of sexual
attention. Mrs. E. likes intercourse if her husband is careful
not to hurt her. Mrs. F. never had any sexual desire until after
second marriage, but it is now very urgent at times. Mrs. G. is
not easily excited, but has never objected to her husband's
attention. Mrs. H. would prefer to have her husband exhibit more
attention. Mrs. I. never refused her husband, but he does not
trouble her much. Mrs. J. thinks that three or four times a week
is satisfactory, but would not object to nightly intercourse.
Mrs. K. does not think that her husband could give her more than
she would like. Mrs. L. would prefer to live with a woman if it
were not for sexual intercourse. Mrs. M., aged 40, says that her
husband, aged 65, insists upon intercourse three times every
night, and that he keeps her tired and disgusted. She each time
has at least one orgasm, and would not object to reasonable
attention."
It may be remarked that, while these results in English women of the
middle class are in fair agreement with the German and Austrian
observations I have quoted, they differ from Campbell's results among
women of the working class in London. This discrepancy is, perhaps, not
difficult to explain. While the conditions of upper-class life may
possibly be peculiarly favorable to the development of the sexual
emotions, among the working classes in London, where the stress of the
struggle for existence under bad hygienic conditions is so severe, they
may be peculiarly unfavorable. It is thus possible that there really are a
smaller number of women experiencing sexual emotion among the class dealt
with by Campbell than among the class to which my series belong.[168]
A more serious consideration is the method of investigation. A working
man, who is perhaps unintelligent outside his own work, and in many cases
married to a woman who is superior in refinement, may possibly be able to
arouse his wife's sexual emotions, and also able to ascertain what those
emotions are, and be willing to answer questions truthfully on this point,
to the best of his ability, but he is by no means a witness whose evidence
is final. While, however, Campbell's facts may not be quite
unquestionable, I am inclined to agree with his conclusion, and
Mantegazza's, that there is a very great range of variation in this
matter, and that there is no age at which the sexual impulse in women may
not appear. A lady who has received the confidence of very many women
tells me that she has never found a woman who was without sexual feeling.
I should myself be inclined to say that it is extremely difficult to find
a woman who is without the aptitude for sexual emotion, although a great
variety of circumstances may hinder, temporarily or permanently, the
development of this latent aptitude. In other words, while the latent
sexual aptitude may always be present, the sexual impulse is liable to be
defective and the aptitude to remain latent, with consequent deficiency of
sexual emotion, and absence of sexual satisfaction.
This is not only indicated by the considerable proportion of my
cases in which there is only moderate or slight sexual feeling. I
have ample evidence that in many cases the element of pain, which
may almost be said to be normal in the establishment of the
sexual function, is never merged, as it normally is, in
pleasurable sensations on the full establishment of sexual
relationships. Sometimes, no doubt, this may be due to
dyspareunia. Sometimes there may be an absolute sexual
anesthesia, whether of congenital or hysterical origin. I have
been told of the case of a married lady who has never been able
to obtain sexual pleasure, although she has had relations with
several men, partly to try if she could obtain the experience,
and partly to please them; the very fact that the motives for
sexual relationships arose from no stronger impulse itself
indicates a congenital defect on the psychic as well as on the
physical side. But, as a rule, the sexual anesthesia involved is
not absolute, but lies in a disinclination to the sexual act due
to various causes, in a defect of strong sexual impulse, and an
inaptitude for the sexual orgasm.
I am indebted to a lady who has written largely on the woman
question, and is herself the mother of a numerous family, for
several letters in regard to the prevalence among women of sexual
coldness, a condition which she regards as by no means to be
regretted. She considers that in all her own children the sexual
impulse is very slightly developed, the boys being indifferent to
women, the girls cold toward men and with no desire to marry,
though all are intelligent and affectionate, the girls showing a
very delicate and refined kind of beauty. (A large selection of
photographs accompanied this communication.) Something of the
same tendency is said to mark the stocks from which this family
springs, and they are said to be notable for their longevity,
healthiness, and disinclination for excesses of all kinds. It is
scarcely necessary to remark that a mother, however highly
intelligent, is by no means an infallible judge as to the
presence or absence in her children of so shy, subtle, and
elusive an impulse as that of sex. At the same time I am by no
means disposed to question the existence in individuals, and even
in families or stocks, of a relatively weak sexual impulse,
which, while still enabling procreation to take place, is
accompanied by no strong attraction to the opposite sex and no
marked inclination for marriage. (Adler, op. cit., p. 168,
found such a condition transmitted from mother to daughter.) Such
persons often possess a delicate type of beauty. Even, however,
when the health is good there seems usually to be a certain lack
of vitality.
It seems to me that a state of sexual anesthesia, relative or absolute,
cannot be considered as anything but abnormal. To take even the lowest
ground, the satisfaction of the reproductive function ought to be at least
as gratifying as the evacuation of the bowels or bladder; while, if we
take, as we certainly must, higher ground than this, an act which is at
once the supreme fact and symbol of love and the supreme creative act
cannot under normal conditions be other than the most pleasurable of all
acts, or it would stand in violent opposition to all that we find in
nature.
How natural the sexual impulse is in women, whatever difficulties may
arise in regard to its complete gratification, is clearly seen when we
come to consider the frequency with which in young women we witness its
more or less instinctive manifestations. Such manifestations are liable to
occur in a specially marked manner in the years immediately following the
establishment of puberty, and are the more impressive when we remember the
comparatively passive part played by the female generally in the game of
courtship, and the immense social force working on women to compel them to
even an unnatural extension of that passive part. The manifestations to
which I allude not only occur with most frequency in young girls, but,
contrary to the common belief, they seem to occur chiefly in innocent and
unperverted girls. The more vicious are skillful enough to avoid the
necessity for any such open manifestations. We have to bear this in mind
when confronted by flagrant sexual phenomena in young girls.
"A young girl," says Hammer ("Ueber die Sinnlichkeit gesunder
Jungfrauen," Die Neue Generation, Aug., 1911), "who has not
previously adopted any method of self-gratification experiences
at the beginning of puberty, about the time of the first
menstruation and the sprouting of the pubic hair, in the absence
of all stimulation by a man, spontaneous sexual tendencies of
both local and psychic nature. On the psychic side there is a
feeling of emptiness and dissatisfaction, a need of subjection
and of serving, and, if the opportunity has so far been absent,
the craving to see masculine nudity and to learn the facts of
procreation. Side by side with these wishes, there are at the
same time inhibitory desires, such as the wish to keep herself
pure, either for a man whom she represents to herself as the
'ideal,' or for her parents, who must not be worried, or as a
member of a chosen people in whose spirit she must live and die,
or out of love to Jesus or to some saint. On the physical side,
there is the feeling of fresh power and energy, of enterprise;
the agreeable tension of the genital regions, which easily become
moist. Then there is the feeling of overirritability and excess
of tension, and the need of relieving the tension through
pinches, blows, tight lacing, and so forth. If the girl remains
innocent of sex satisfaction, there takes place during sleep, at
regular intervals of about three days, more or less the relief
and emission of the tense glands, not corresponding to the
menstrual period, but to intercourse, and serving better than
sexual instruction to represent to her the phenomena of
intercourse. If at this period actual intercourse takes place, it
is, as a rule, free from pain, as also is the introduction of the
speculum. Without any seduction from without, the chaste girl now
frequently finds a way to relieve the excessive tension without
the aid of a man. It is self-abuse that leads gradually to the
production of pain in defloration. The menstrual phenomena
correspond to birth; self-gratification or relief during sleep to
intercourse." This statement of the matter is somewhat too
absolute and unqualified. Under the artificial conditions of
civilization the inhibitory influences of training speedily work
powerfully, and more or less successfully, in banishing sexual
phenomena into the subconscious, sometimes to work all the
mischief there which Freud attributes to them. It must also be
said (as I have pointed out in the discussion of Auto-erotism in
another volume) that sexual dreams seem to be the exception
rather than the rule in innocent girls. It remains true that
sexual phenomena in girls at puberty must not be regarded as
morbid or unnatural. There is also very good reason for believing
(even apart from the testimony of so experienced a gynecologist
as Hammer) that on the physical side sexual processes tend to be
accomplished with a facility that is often lost in later years
with prolonged chastity. This is true alike of intercourse and of
childbirth. (See vol. vi of these Studies, ch. xii.)
Even, however, in the case of adults the active part played by women in
real life in matters of love by no means corresponds to the conventional
ideas on these subjects. No doubt nearly every woman receives her sexual
initiation from an older and more experienced man. But, on the other hand,
nearly every man receives his first initiation through the active and
designed steps taken by an older and more experienced woman. It is too
often forgotten by those who write on these subjects that the man who
seduces a woman has usually himself in the first place been "seduced" by a
woman.
A well-known physician in Chicago tells me that on making inquiry
of 25 middle-class married men in succession be found that 16 had
been first seduced by a woman. An officer in the Indian Medical
Service writes to me as follows: "Once at a club in Burma we were
some 25 at table and the subject of first intercourse came up.
All had been led astray by servants save 2, whom their sisters'
governesses had initiated. We were all men in the 'service,' so
the facts may be taken to be typical of what occurs in our
stratum of society. All had had sexual relations with respectable
unmarried girls, and most with the wives of men known to their
fathers, in some instances these being old enough to be their
lovers' mothers. Apparently up to the age of 17 none had dared to
make the first advances, yet from the age of 13 onward all had
had ample opportunity for gratifying their sexual instincts with
women. Though all had been to public schools where homosexuality
was known to occur, yet (as I can assert from intimate knowledge)
none had given signs of inversion or perversion in Burma."
In Russia, Tchlenoff, investigating the sexual life of over 2000
Moscow students of upper and middle class (Archives
d'Anthropologie Criminelle, Oct.-Nov., 1908), found that in half
of them the first coitus took place between 14 and 17 years of
age; in 41 per cent, with prostitutes, in 39 per cent, with
servants, and in 10 per cent, with married women. In 41 per cent,
the young man declared that he had taken the initiative, in 25
per cent, the women took it, and in 23 per cent, the incitement
came from a comrade.
The histories I have recorded in Appendix B (as well as in the
two following volumes of these Studies) very well illustrate
the tendency of young girls to manifest sexual impulses when
freed from the constraint which they feel in the presence of
adult men and from the fear of consequences. These histories show
especially how very frequently nurse-maids and servant-girls
effect the sexual initiation of the young boys intrusted to them.
How common this impulse is among adolescent girls of low social
class is indicated by the fact that certainly the majority of
middle-class men can recall instances from their own childhood.
(I here leave out of account the widespread practice among nurses
of soothing very young children in their charge by manipulating
the sexual organs.)
A medical correspondent, in emphasizing this point, writes that
"many boys will tell you that, if a nurse-girl is allowed to
sleep in the same room with them, she will attempt sexual
manipulations. Either the girl gets into bed with the boy and
pulling him on to her tickles the penis and inserts it into the
vulva, making the boy imitate sexual movements, or she simply
masturbates the child, to get him excited and interested, often
showing him the female sexual opening in herself or in his
sisters, teaching him to finger it. In fact, a nurse-girl may
ruin a boy, chiefly, I think, because she has been brought up to
regard the sexual organs as a mystery, and is in utter ignorance
about them. She thus takes the opportunity of investigating the
boy's penis to find out how it works, etc., in order to satisfy
her curiosity. I know of a case in which a nurse in a fashionable
London Square garden used to collect all the boys and girls
(gentlemen's children) in a summer-house when it grew dark, and,
turning up her petticoats, invite all the boys to look at and
feel her vulva, and also incite the older boys of 12 or 14 to
have coitus with her. Girls are afraid of pregnancy, so do not
allow an adult penis to operate. I think people should take on a
far higher class of nurses, than they do."
"Children ought never to be allowed, under any circumstances
whatever," wrote Lawson Tait (Diseases of Women, 1889, p. 62),
"to sleep with servants. In every instance where I have found a
number of children affected [by masturbation] the contagion has
been traced to a servant." Freud has found (Neurologisches
Centralblatt, No. 10, 1896) that in cases of severe youthful
hysteria the starting point may frequently be traced to sexual
manipulations by servants, nurse-girls, and governesses.
"When I was about 8 or 9," a friend writes, "a servant-maid of
our family, who used to carry the candle out of my bedroom, often
drew down the bedclothes and inspected my organs. One night she
put the penis in her mouth. When I asked her why she did it her
answer was that 'sucking a boy's little dangle' cured her of
pains in her stomach. She said that she had done it to other
little boys, and declared that she liked doing it. This girl was
about 16; she had lately been 'converted.' Another maid in our
family used to kiss me warmly on the naked abdomen when I was a
small boy. But she never did more than that. I have heard of
various instances of servant-girls tampering with boys before
puberty, exciting the penis to premature erection by
manipulation, suction, and contact with their own parts." Such
overstimulation must necessarily in some cases have an injurious
influence on the boy's immature nervous system. Thus, Hutchinson
(Archives of Surgery, vol. iv, p. 200) describes a case of
amblyopia in a boy, developing after he had been placed to sleep
in a servant-girl's room.
Moll (Konträre Sexualempfindung, third edition, 1899, p. 325)
refers to the frequency with which servant-girls (between the
ages of 18 and 30) carry on sexual practices with young boys
(between 5 and 13) committed to their care. More than a century
earlier Tissot, in his famous work on onanism, referred to the
frequency with which servant-girls corrupt boys by teaching them
to masturbate; and still earlier, in England, the author of
Onania gave many such cases. We may, indeed, go back to the
time of Rabelais, who (as Dr. Kiernan reminds me) represents the
governesses of Gargantua, when he was a child, as taking pleasure
in playing with his penis till it became wet, and joking with
each other about it. (Gargantua, book i, chapter ix.)
The prevalence of such manifestations among servant-girls
witnesses to their prevalence among lower-class girls generally.
In judging such acts, even when they seem to be very deliberate,
it is important to remember that at this age unreasoning instinct
plays a very large part in the manifestations of the sexual
impulse. This is clearly indicated by the phenomena observed in
the insane. Thus, as we have seen (page 214), Schröter has found
that, among girls of low social class under 20 years of age,
spontaneous periodical sexual manifestations at menstrual epochs
occurred in as large a proportion as 72 per cent. Among girls of
better social position these impulses are inhibited, or at all
events modified, by good taste or good feeling, the influences of
tradition or education; it is only to the latter that children
should be intrusted.
Hoche mentions a case in which a man was accused of repeatedly
exhibiting his sexual organs to the servant-girl at a house; she
enjoyed the spectacle (Neurologisches Centralblatt, 1896, No.
2). It may well be that in some cases of self-exhibition the
offender has good reason, on the ground of previous experience,
for thinking that he is giving pleasure. "When we used to go to
bathe while I was at school," writes a correspondent, "girls from
a poor quarter of the lower town (some quite 16) often followed
us and stood to watch about a hundred yards from the river. They
used to 'giggle' and 'pass remarks.' I have seen girls of this
class peeping through chinks of a palisade around a bathing-place
on the Thames." A correspondent who has given special attention
to the point tells me of the great interest displayed by young
girls of the people in Italy in the sexual organs of men.
Curiosity—whether in the form of the desire for knowledge or the
desire for sensation—is, of course, not confined to young girls
and women of lower social strata, though in them it is less often
restrained by motives of self-respect and good feeling. "At the
age of 8," writes a correspondent, "I was one day playing in a
spare room with a girl of about 12 or 13. She gave me a
penholder, and, crouching upon her hands and knees, with her
posterior toward me, invited me to introduce the instrument into
the vulva. This was the first time I had seen the female parts,
and, as I appeared to be somewhat repelled, she coaxed me to
comply with her desire. I did as she directed, and she said that
it gave her pleasure. Several times after I repeated the same act
at her request. A friend tells me that when he was 10 a girl of
16 asked him to lace up her boots. While he was kneeling at her
feet his hand touched her ankle. She asked him to put his hand
higher, and repeated 'Higher, higher,' till he touched the
pudenda, and finally, at her request, put his finger into the
vestibule. This girl was very handsome and amiable, and a
favorite of the boy's mother. No one suspected this propensity."
Again, a correspondent (a man of science) tells me of a friend
who lately, when dining out, met a girl, the daughter of a
country vicar; he was not specially attracted to her and paid her
no special attention. "A few days afterward he was astonished to
receive a call from her one afternoon (though his address is not
discoverable from any recognized source). She sat down as near to
him as she could, and rested her hand on his thigh, etc., while
talking on different subjects and drinking tea. Then without any
verbal prelude she asked him to have connection with her. Though
not exactly a Puritan, he is not the man to jump at such an offer
from a woman he is not in love with, so, after ascertaining that
the girl was virgo intacta, he declined and she went away. A
fortnight or so later he received a letter from her in the
country, making no reference to what had passed, but giving an
account of her work with her Sunday-school class. He did not
reply, and then came a curt note asking him to return her letter.
My friend feels sure she was devoted to auto-erotic performances,
but, having become attracted to him, came to the conclusion she
would like to try normal intercourse."
Wolbarst, studying the prevalence of gonorrhea among boys in New
York (especially, it would appear, in quarters where the
foreign-born elements—mainly Russian Jew and south Italian—are
large), states: "In my study of this subject there have been
observed 3 cases of gonorrheal urethritis, in boys aged,
respectively, 4, 10, and 12 years, which were acquired in the
usual manner, from girls ranging between 10 and 12 years of age.
In each case, according to the story told by the victim, the girl
made the first advances, and in I case, that of the 4-year-old
boy, the act was consummated in the form of an assault, by a
girl 12 years old, in which the child was threatened with injury
unless he performed his part." (A. L. Wolbarst, Journal of the
American Medical Association, Sept. 28, 1901.) In a further
series of cases (Medical Record, Oct. 29, 1910) Wolbarst
obtained similar results, though he recognizes also the frequency
of precocious sexuality in the young boys themselves.
Gibb states, concerning assaults on children by women: "It is
undeniably true that they occur much more frequently than is
generally supposed, although but few of the cases are brought to
public notice, owing to the difficulty of proving the charge."
(W. T. Gibb, article "Indecent Assaults upon Children," in A.
McLane Hamilton's System of Legal Medicine, vol. i, p. 651.)
Gibb's opinion carries weight, since he is medical adviser for
the New York Society for the Protection of Children, and
compelled to sift the evidence carefully in such cases.
It should be mentioned that, while a sexual curiosity exercised
on younger children is, in girls about the age of puberty, an
ill-regulated, but scarcely morbid, manifestation, in older women
it may be of pathological origin. Thus, Kisch records the case of
a refined and educated lady of 30 who had been married for nine
years, but had never experienced sexual pleasure in coitus. For a
long time past, however, she had felt a strong desire to play
with the genital organs of children of either sex, a proceeding
which gave her sexual pleasure. She sought to resist this impulse
as much as possible, but during menstruation it was often
irresistible. Examination showed an enlarged and retroflexed
uterus and anesthesia of vagina. (Kisch, Die Sterilität des
Weibes, 1886, p. 103.) The psychological mechanism by which an
anesthetic vagina leads to a feeling of repulsion for normal
coitus and normal sexual organs, and directs the sexual feelings
toward more infantile forms of sexuality, is here not difficult
to trace.
It is not often that the sexual attempts of girls and young women
on boys—notwithstanding their undoubted frequency—become of
medico-legal interest. In France in the course of ten years (1874
to 1884) only 181 women, who were mostly between 20 and 30 years
of age, were actually convicted of sexual attempts on children
below 15. (Paul Bernard, "Viols et attentats a la Pudeur,"
Archives de l'Anthropologie Criminelle, 1887.) Lop ("Attentats
à la Pudeur commis par des Femmes sur des Petits Enfants," id.,
Aug., 1896) brings together a number of cases chiefly committed
by girls between the ages of 18 and 20. In England such
accusations against a young woman or girl may easily be
circumvented. If she is under 16 she is protected by the Criminal
Law Amendment Act and cannot be punished. In any case, when found
out, she can always easily bring the sympathy to her side by
declaring that she is not the aggressor, but the victim. Cases of
violent sexual assault upon girls, Lawson Tait remarks, while
they undoubtedly do occur, are very much rarer than the frequency
with which the charge is made would lead us to suspect. At one
time, by arrangement with the authority, 70 such charges at
Birmingham were consecutively brought before Lawson Tait. These
charges were all made under the Criminal Law Amendment Act. In
only 6 of these cases was he able to advise prosecution, in all
of which cases conviction was obtained. In 7 other cases in which
the police decided to prosecute there was either no conviction or
a very light sentence. In at least 26 cases the charge was
clearly trumped up. The average age of these girls was 12. "There
is not a piece of sexual argot that ever had before reached my
ears," remarks Mr. Tait, "but was used by these children in the
descriptions given by them of what had been done to them; and
they introduced, in addition, quite a new vocabulary on the
subject. The minute and detailed descriptions of the sexual act
given by chits of 10 and 11 would do credit to the pages of
Mirabeau. At first sight it is a puzzle to see how children so
young obtained their information." "About the use of the word
'seduced,'" the same writer remarks, "I wish to say that the
class of women from amongst whom the great bulk of these cases
are drawn seem to use it in a sense altogether different from
that generally employed. It is not with them a process in which
male villainy succeeds by various arts in overcoming female
virtue and reluctance, but simply a date at which an incident in
their lives occurs for the first time; and, according to their
use of the phrase, the ancient legend of the Sacred Scriptures,
had it ended in the more ordinary and usual way by the virtue of
Joseph yielding to the temptation offered, would have to read as
a record of the seduction of Mrs. Potiphar."
With reference to Lawson Tait's observation that violent assaults
on women, while they do occur, are very much rarer than the
frequency with which such charges are made would lead us to
believe, it may be remarked that many medico-legal authorities
are of the same opinion. (See, e.g., G. Vivian Poore's
Treatise on Medical Jurisprudence, 1901, p. 325. This writer
also remarks: "I hold very strongly that a woman may rape a man
as much as a man may rape a woman.") There can be little doubt
that the plea of force is very frequently seized on by women as
the easiest available weapon of defense when her connection with
a man has been revealed. She has been so permeated by the current
notion that no "respectable" woman can possibly have any sexual
impulses of her own to gratify that, in order to screen what she
feels to be regarded as an utterly shameful and wicked, as well
as foolish, act, she declares it never took place by her own will
at all. "Now, I ask you, gentlemen," I once heard an experienced
counsel address the jury in a criminal case, "as men of the
world, have you ever known or heard of a woman, a single woman,
confess that she had had sexual connection and not declare that
force had been used to compel her to such connection?" The
statement is a little sweeping, but in this matter there is some
element of truth in the "man of the world's" opinion. One may
refer to the story (told by Etienne de Bourbon, by Francisco de
Osuna in a religious work, and by Cervantes in Don Quixote,
part ii, ch. xlv) concerning a magistrate who, when a girl came
before him to complain of rape, ordered the accused young man
either to marry her or pay her a sum of money. The fine was paid,
and the magistrate then told the man to follow the girl and take
the money from her by force; the man obeyed, but the girl
defended herself so energetically that he could not secure the
money. Then the judge, calling the parties before him again,
ordered the fine to be returned: "Had you defended your chastity
as well as you have defended your money it could not have been
taken away from you." In most cases of "rape," in the case of
adults, there has probably been some degree of consent, though
that partial assent may have been basely secured by an appeal to
the lower nervous centers alone, with no participation of the
intelligence and will. Freud (Zur Psychopathologie des
Alltagslebens, p. 87) considers that on this ground the judge's
decision in Don Quixote is "psychologically unjust," because in
such a case the woman's strength is paralyzed by the fact that an
unconscious instinct in herself takes her assailant's part
against her own conscious resistance. But it must be remembered
that the factor of instinct plays a large part even when no
violence is attempted.
Such facts and considerations as these tend to show that the sexual
impulse is by no means so weak in women as many would lead us to think. It
would appear that, whereas in earlier ages there was generally a tendency
to credit women with an unduly large share of the sexual impulse, there is
now a tendency to unduly minimize the sexual impulse in women.
[156]
I have had occasion to refer to the historic evolution of
male opinion regarding women in previous volumes, as, e.g., Man and
Woman, chapter i, and the appendix on "The Influence of Menstruation on
the Position of Women" in the first volume of these Studies.
[157]
The terminology proposed by Ziehen ("Zur Lehre von den
psychopathischen Konstitutionen," Charité Annalen, vol. xxxxiii, 1909)
is as follows: For absence of sexual feeling, anhedonia; for diminution
of the same, hyphedonia; for excess of sexual feeling, hyperhedonia;
for qualitative sexual perversions, parhedonia. "Erotic blindness" was
suggested by Nardelli.
[158]
O. Adler, Die Mangelhafte Geschlechtsempfindung des
Weibes, 1904, p. 146.
[159]
A correspondent tells me that he knows a woman who has been
a prostitute since the age of 15, but never experienced sexual pleasure
and a real, non-simulated orgasm till she was 23; since then she has
become very sensual. In other similar cases the hitherto indifferent
prostitute, having found the man who suits her, abandons her profession,
even though she is thereby compelled to live in extreme poverty. "An
insensible woman," as La Bruyère long ago remarked in his chapter "Des
Femmes," "is merely one who has not yet seen the man she must love."
[160]
Guttceit (Dreissig Jahre Praxis, vol. i, p. 416) pointed
out that the presence or absence of the orgasm is the only factor in
"sexual anesthesia" of which we can speak at all definitely; and he
believed that anaphrodism, in the sense of absence of the sexual impulse,
never occurs at all, many women having confided to him that they had
sexual desires, although those desires were not gratified by coitus.
[161]
[162]
Havelock Ellis, "Madame de Warens," The Venture, 1903.
[163]
It is interesting to observe that finally even Adler admits
(op. cit., p. 155) that there is no such thing as congenital lack of
aptitude for sexual sensibility.
[164]
"I am not entirely satisfied with the testimony as to the
alleged sexual anesthesia," a medical correspondent writes. "The same
principle which makes the young harlot an old saint makes the repentant
rake a believer in sexual anesthesia. Most of the medical men who believe,
or claim to believe, that sexual anesthesia is so prevalent do so either
to flatter their hysterical patients or because they have the mentality of
the Hyacinthe of Zola's Paris."
[165]
Differences in the Nervous Organization of Man and Woman,
1891; chapter xiii, "Sexual Instinct in Men and Women Compared."
[166]
Matthews Duncan considered that "the healthy performance of
the functions of child-bearing is surely connected with a well-regulated
condition of desire and pleasure." "Desire and pleasure," he adds, "may be
excessive, furious, overpowering, without bringing the female into the
class of maniacs; they may be temporary, healthy, and moderate; they may
be absent or dull." (Matthews Duncan, Goulstonian Lectures on Sterility
in Woman, pp. 91, 121.)
[167]
Geoffrey Mortimer, Chapters on Human Love, 1898, ch.
xvi.
[168]
I do not, however, attach much weight to this possibility.
The sexual instinct among the lower social classes everywhere is subject
to comparatively weak inhibition, and Löwenfeld is probably right in
believing the women of the lower class do not suffer from sexual
anesthesia to anything like the same extent as upper-class women. In
England most women of the working class appear to have had sexual
intercourse at some time in their lives, notwithstanding the risks of
pregnancy, and if pregnancy occurs they refer to it calmly as an
"accident," for which they cannot be held responsible; "Well, I couldn't
help that," I have heard a young widow remark when mildly reproached for
the existence of her illegitimate child. Again, among American negresses
there seems to be no defect of sexual passion, and it is said that the
majority of negresses in the Southern States support not only their
children, but their lovers and husbands.
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