The Definition of Sadism-De
Sade-Masochism to some Extent Normal-Sacher-Masoch-No
Real Line of Demarcation between Sadism and Masochism-Algolagnia
includes both Groups of Manifestations-The
Love-bite as a Bridge from Normal Phenomena to Algolagnia-The
Fascination of Blood-The Most Extreme Perversions
are Linked on to Normal Phenomena.
We thus see that there are here two
separate groups of feelings: one, in the masculine
line, which delights in displaying force and often
inflicts pain or the simulacrum of pain; the other,
in the feminine line, which delights in submitting
to that force, and even finds pleasure in a slight
amount of pain, or the idea of pain, when associated
with the experiences of love. We see, also, that
these two groups of feelings are complementary.
Within the limits consistent with normal and healthy
life, what men are impelled to give women love to
receive. So that we need not unduly deprecate
the “cruelty” of men within these limits,
nor unduly commiserate the women who are subjected
to it.
Such a conclusion, however, as we
have also seen, only holds good within those normal
limits which an attempt has here been made to determine.
The phenomena we have been considering are strictly
normal phenomena, having their basis in the conditions
of tumescence and detumescence in animal and primitive
human courtship. At one point, however, when discussing
the phenomena of the love-bite, I referred to the
facts which indicate how this purely normal manifestation
yet insensibly passes over into the region of the
morbid. It is an instance that enables us to realize
how even the most terrible and repugnant sexual perversions
are still demonstrably linked on to phenomena that
are fundamentally normal. The love-bite may be
said to give us the key to that perverse impulse which
has been commonly called sadism.
There is some difference of opinion
as to how “sadism” may be best defined.
Perhaps the simplest and most usual definition is that
of Krafft-Ebing, as sexual emotion associated with
the wish to inflict pain and use violence, or, as
he elsewhere expresses it, “the impulse to cruel
and violent treatment of the opposite sex, and the
coloring of the idea of such acts with lustful feeling."
A more complete definition is that of Moll, who describes
sadism as a condition in which “the sexual impulse
consists in the tendency to strike, ill-use, and humiliate
the beloved person." This definition has the advantage
of bringing in the element of moral pain. A further
extension is made in Fere’s definition as “the
need of association of violence and cruelty with sexual
enjoyment, such violence or cruelty not being necessarily
exerted by the person himself who seeks sexual pleasure
in this association." Garnier’s definition,
while comprising all these points, further allows for
the fact that a certain degree of sadism may be regarded
as normal. “Pathological sadism,”
he states, “is an impulsive and obsessing sexual
perversion characterized by a close connection between
suffering inflicted or mentally represented and the
sexual orgasm, without this necessary and sufficing
condition frigidity usually remaining absolute."
It must be added that these definitions are very incomplete
if by “sadism” we are to understand the
special sexual perversions which are displayed in De
Sade’s novels. Iwan Bloch ("Eugen Duehren"),
in the course of his book on De Sade, has attempted
a definition strictly on this basis, and, as will be
seen, it is necessary to make it very elaborate:
“A connection, whether intentionally sought
or offered by chance, of sexual excitement and sexual
enjoyment with the real or only symbolic (ideal, illusionary)
appearance of frightful and shocking events, destructive
occurrences and practices, which threaten or destroy
the life, health, and property of man and other living
creatures, and threaten and interrupt the continuity
of inanimate objects, whereby the person who from
such occurrences obtains sexual enjoyment may either
himself be the direct cause, or cause them to take
place by means of other persons, or merely be the spectator,
or, finally, be, voluntarily or involuntarily, the
object against which these processes are directed."
This definition of sadism as found in De Sade’s
works is thus, more especially by its final clause,
a very much wider conception than the usual definition.
Donatien Alphonse Francois, Marquis
De Sade, was born in 1740 at Paris in the house
of the great Conde. He belonged to a very noble,
ancient, and distinguished Provencal family; Petrarch’s
Laura, who married a De Sade, was one of his ancestors,
and the family had cultivated both arms and letters
with success. He was, according to Lacroix,
“an adorable youth whose delicately pale and
dusky face, lighted up by two large black [according
to another account blue] eyes, already bore the
languorous imprint of the vice which was to corrupt
his whole being”; his voice was “drawling
and caressing”; his gait had “a softly
feminine grace.” Unfortunately there
is no authentic portrait of him. His early life
is sketched in letter iv of his Aline et Valcourt.
On leaving the College-Louis-lé-Grand
he became a cavalry officer and went through the
Seven Years’ War in Germany. There can be
little doubt that the experiences of his military
life, working on a femininely vicious temperament,
had much to do with the development of his perversion.
He appears to have got into numerous scrapes,
of which the details are unknown, and his father
sought to marry him to the daughter of an aristocratic
friend of his own, a noble and amiable girl of
20. It so chanced that when young De Sade
first went to the house of his future wife only
her younger sister, a girl of 13, was at home; with
her he at once fell in love and his love was reciprocated;
they were both musical enthusiasts, and she had
a beautiful voice. The parents insisted on
carrying out the original scheme of marriage.
De Sade’s wife loved him, and, in spite of
everything, served his interests with Griselda-like
devotion; she was, Ginisty remarks, a saint, a
saint of conjugal life; but her love was from the
first only requited with repulsion, contempt, and
suspicion. There were, however, children
of the marriage; the career of the eldest-an
estimable young man who went into the army and also
had artistic ability, but otherwise had no community
of tastes with his father-has been
sketched by Paul Ginisty, who has also edited
the letters of the Marquise. De Sade’s passion
for the younger sister continued (he idealized
her as Juliette), though she was placed in a convent
beyond his reach, and at a much later period he
eloped with her and spent perhaps the happiest period
of his life, soon terminated by her death.
It is evident that this unhappy marriage was decisive
in determining De Sade’s career; he at once
threw himself recklessly into every form of dissipation,
spending his health and his substance sometimes among
refinedly debauched nobles and sometimes among coarsely
debauched lackeys. He was, however, always
something of an artist, something of a student,
something of a philosopher, and at an early period
he began to write, apparently at the age of 23.
It was at this age, and only a few months after his
marriage, that on account of some excess he was
for a time confined in Vincennes. He was
destined to spend 27 years of his life in prisons,
if we include the 13 years which in old age he passed
in the asylum at Charenton. His actual offenses
were by no means so terrible as those he loved
to dwell on in imagination, and for the most part
they have been greatly exaggerated. His most
extreme offenses were the indecent and forcible
flagellation in 1768 of a young woman, Rosa Keller,
who had accosted him in the street for alms, and
whom he induced by false pretenses to come to
his house, and the administration of aphrodisiacal
bonbons to some prostitutes at Marseilles.
It is owing to the fact that the prime of his
manhood was spent in prisons that De Sade fell back
on dreaming, study, and novel-writing. Shut
out from real life, he solaced his imagination
with the perverted visions-to a very large
extent, however, founded on knowledge of the real facts
of perverted life in his time-which
he has recorded in Justine (1781); Les
120 Journées de Sodome où l’Ecole du Libertinage
(1785); Aline et Valcour où lé Roman Philosophique
(1788); Juliette (1796); La Philosophie
dans lé Boudoir (1795). These books constitute
a sort of encyclopedia of sexual perversions, an eighteenth
century Psychopathia Sexualis, and embody, at
the same time, a philosophy. He was the first,
Bloch remarks, who realized the immense importance
of the sexual question. His general attitude
may be illustrated by the following passage (as quoted
by Lacassagne): “If there are beings in
the world whose acts shock all accepted prejudices,
we must not preach at them or punish them ...
because their bizarre tastes no more depend upon themselves
than it depends on you whether you are witty or stupid,
well made or hump-backed.... What would become
of your laws, your morality, your religion, your
gallows, your Paradise, your gods, your hell,
if it were shown that such and such fluids, such
fibers, or a certain acridity in the blood, or in
the animal spirits, alone suffice to make a man
the object of your punishments or your rewards?”
He was enormously well read, Bloch points out,
and his interest extended to every field of literature:
belles lettres, philosophy, theology, politics,
sociology, ethnology, mythology, and history.
Perhaps his favorite reading was travels.
He was minutely familiar with the bible, though
his attitude was extremely critical. His favorite
philosopher was Lamettrie, whom he very frequently
quotes, and he had carefully studied Machiavelli.
De Sade had foreseen the Revolution;
he was an ardent admirer of Marat, and at this
period he entered into public life as a mild, gentle,
rather bald and gray-haired person. Many scenes
of the Revolution were the embodiment in real
life of De Sade’s imagination; such, for
instance, were the barbaric tortures inflicted,
at the instigation of Theroigne de Mericourt, on La
Belle Bouquetière. Yet De Sade played
a very peaceful part in the events of that time,
chiefly as a philanthropist, spending much of
his time in the hospitals. He saved his parents-in-law
from the scaffold, although they had always been
hostile to him, and by his moderation aroused
the suspicions of the revolutionary party, and
was again imprisoned. Later he wrote a pamphlet
against Napoleon, who never forgave him and had
him shut up in Charenton as a lunatic; it was
a not unusual method at that time of disposing
of persons whom it was wished to put out of the way,
and, notwithstanding De Sade’s organically
abnormal temperament, there is no reason to regard
him as actually insane. Royer-Collard, an
eminent alienist of that period, then at the head
of Charenton, declared De Sade to be sane, and his
detailed report is still extant. Other specialists
were of the same opinion. Bloch, who quotes
these opinions (Neue Forschungen, etc.,
, says that the only possible conclusion is
that De Sade was sane, but neurasthenic, and Eulenburg
also concludes that he cannot be regarded as insane,
although he was highly degenerate. In the
asylum he amused himself by organizing a theater.
Lacroix, many years later, questioning old people who
had known him, was surprised to find that even
in the memory of most virtuous and respectable
persons he lived merely as an “aimable
mauvais sujet.” It is noteworthy that
De Sade aroused, in a singular degree, the love
and devotion of women,-whether or not
we may regard this as evidence of the fascination exerted
on women by cruelty. Janin remarks that he
had seen many pretty little letters written by
young and charming women of the great world, begging
for the release of the “pauvre marquis.”
Sardou, the dramatist, has stated that
in 1855 he visited the Bicetre and met an old
gardener who had known De Sade during his reclusion
there. He told that one of the marquis’s
amusements was to procure baskets of the most
beautiful and expensive roses; he would then sit
on a footstool by a dirty streamlet which ran through
the courtyard, and would take the roses, one by one,
gaze at them, smell them with a voluptuous expression,
soak them in the muddy water, and fling them away,
laughing as he did so. He died on the 2d
of December, 1814, at the age of 74. He was almost
blind, and had long been a martyr to gout, asthma,
and an affection of the stomach. It was his
wish that acorns should be planted over his grave
and his memory effaced. At a later period his
skull was examined by a phrenologist, who found it
small and well formed; “one would take it
at first for a woman’s head.” The
skull belonged to Dr. Londe, but about the middle
of the century it was stolen by a doctor who conveyed
it to England, where it may possibly yet be found.
[The foregoing account is mainly founded on Paul
Lacroix, Revue de Paris, 1837, and Curiosités
de l’Histoire de France, second series,
Procès Célèbres, ; Janin, Revue
de Paris, 1834; Eugen Duehren (Iwan Bloch), Der
Marquis de Sade und Seine Zeit, third edition,
1901; id., Neue Forschungen ueber den Marquis
de Sade und Seine Zeit, 1904; Lacassagne,
Vacher l’Eventreur et les Crimes Sadiques,
1899; Paul Ginisty, La Marquise de Sade,
1901.]
The attempt to define sadism strictly
and penetrate to its roots in De Sade’s personal
temperament reveals a certain weakness in the current
conception of this sexual perversion. It is not,
as we might infer, both from the definition usually
given and from its probable biological heredity from
primitive times, a perversion due to excessive masculinity.
The strong man is more apt to be tender than cruel,
or at all events knows how to restrain within bounds
any impulse to cruelty; the most extreme and elaborate
forms of sadism (putting aside such as are associated
with a considerable degree of imbecility) are more
apt to be allied with a somewhat feminine organization.
Montaigne, indeed, observed long ago that cruelty
is usually accompanied by feminine softness.
In the same way it is a mistake to suppose
that the very feminine woman is not capable of
sadistic tendencies. Even if we take into account
the primitive animal conditions of combat, the male
must suffer as well as inflict pain, and the female
must not only experience subjection to the male,
but also share in the emotions of her partner’s
victory over his rivals. As bearing on these
points, I may quote the following remarks written
by a lady: “It is said that, the weaker
and more feminine a woman is, the greater the
subjection she likes. I don’t think it has
anything at all to do with the general character,
but depends entirely on whether the feeling of
constraint and helplessness affects her sexually.
In men I have several times noticed that those who
were most desirous of subjection to the women
they loved had, in ordinary life, very strong
and determined characters. I know of others,
too, who with very weak characters are very imperious
toward the women they care for. Among women
I have often been surprised to see how a strong,
determined woman will give way to a man she loves,
and how tenacious of her own will may be some fragile,
clinging creature who in daily life seems quite unable
to act on her own responsibility. A certain
amount of passivity, a desire to have their emotions
worked on, seems to me, so far as my small experience
goes, very common among ordinary, presumably normal
men. A good deal of stress is laid on femininity
as an attraction in a woman, and this may be so
to very strong natures, but, so far as I have
seen, the women who obtain extraordinary empire
over men are those with a certain virility in
their character and passions. If with this
virility they combine a fragility or childishness
of appearance which appeals to a man in another
way at the same time, they appear to be irresistible.”
I have noted some of the feminine traits
in De Sade’s temperament and appearance.
The same may often be noted in sadists whose crimes
were very much more serious and brutal than those of
De Sade. A man who stabbed women in the streets
at St. Louis was a waiter with a high-pitched,
effeminate voice and boyish appearance. Reidel,
the sadistic murderer, was timid, modest, and delicate;
he was too shy to urinate in the presence of other
people. A sadistic zooephilist, described
by A. Marie, who attempted to strangle a woman
fellow-worker, had always been very timid, blushed
with much facility, could not look even children in
the eyes, or urinate in the presence of another person,
or make sexual advances to women.
Kiernan and Moyer are inclined to connect
the modesty and timidity of sadists with a disgust
for normal coitus. They were called upon
to examine an inverted married woman who had inflicted
several hundred wounds, mostly superficial, with forks,
scissors, etc., on the genital organs and
other parts of a girl whom she had adopted from
a “Home.” This woman was very prominent
in church and social matters in the city in which
she lived, so that many clergymen and local persons
of importance testified to her chaste, modest,
and even prudish character; she was found to be
sane at the time of the acts. (Moyer, Alienist and
Neurologist, May, 1907, and private letter
from Dr. Kiernan.)
We are thus led to another sexual
perversion, which is usually considered the opposite
of sadism. Masochism is commonly regarded as a
peculiarly feminine sexual perversion, in women, indeed,
as normal in some degree, and in man as a sort of
inversion of the normal masculine emotional attitude,
but this view of the matter is not altogether justified,
for definite and pronounced masochism seems to be
much rarer in women than sadism. Krafft-Ebing,
whose treatment of this phenomenon is, perhaps, his
most valuable and original contribution to sexual psychology,
has dealt very fully with the matter and brought forward
many cases. He thus defines this perversion:
“By masochism I understand a peculiar perversion
of the psychical vita sexualis in which the
individual affected, in sexual feeling and thought,
is controlled by the idea of being completely and
unconditionally subject to the will of a person of
the opposite sex, of being treated by this person
as by a master, humiliated and abused. This idea
is colored by sexual feeling; the masochist lives in
fancies in which he creates situations of this kind,
and he often attempts to realize them."
In a minor degree, not amounting to
a complete perversion of the sexual instinct, this
sentiment of abnegation, the desire to be even physically
subjected to the adored woman, cannot be regarded as
abnormal. More than two centuries before Krafft-Ebing
appeared, Robert Burton, who was no mean psychologist,
dilated on the fact that love is a kind of slavery.
“They are commonly slaves,” he wrote of
lovers, “captives, voluntary servants; amator
amicae mancipium, as Castilio terms him; his mistress’s
servant, her drudge, prisoner, bondman, what not?"
Before Burton’s time the legend of the erotic
servitude of Aristotle was widely spread in Europe,
and pictures exist of the venerable philosopher on
all fours ridden by a woman with a whip. In classic
times various masochistic phenomena are noted with
approval by Ovid. It has been pointed out by Moll
that there are traces of masochistic feeling in some
of Goethe’s poems, especially “Lilis Park”
and “Erwin und Elmire.”
Similar traces have been found in the poems of Heine,
Platen, Hamerling, and many other poets. The poetry
of the people is also said to contain many such traces.
It may, indeed, be said that passion in its more lyric
exaltations almost necessarily involves some resort
to masochistic expression. A popular lady novelist
in a novel written many years ago represents her hero,
a robust soldier, imploring the lady of his love,
in a moment of passionate exaltation, to trample on
him, certainly without any wish to suggest sexual
perversion. If it is true that the Antonio of
Otway’s Venice Preserved is a caricature
of Shaftesbury, then it would appear that one of the
greatest of English statesmen was supposed to exhibit
very pronounced and characteristic masochistic tendencies;
and in more recent days masochistic expressions have
been noted as occurring in the love-letters of so
emphatically virile a statesman as Bismarck.
Thus a minor degree of the masochistic
tendency may be said to be fairly common, while its
more pronounced manifestations are more common than
pronounced sadism. It very frequently affects persons
of a sensitive, refined, and artistic temperament.
It may even be said that this tendency is in the line
of civilization. Krafft-Ebing points out that
some of the most delicate and romantic love-episodes
of the Middle Ages are distinctly colored by masochistic
emotion. The increasing tendency to masochism
with increasing civilization becomes explicable if
we accept Colin Scott’s “secondary law
of courting” as accessory to the primary law
that the male is active, and the female passive and
imaginatively attentive to the states of the excited
male. According to the secondary law, “the
female develops a superadded activity, the male becoming
relatively passive and imaginatively attentive to
the psychical and bodily states of the female."
We may probably agree that this “secondary law
of courting” does really represent a tendency
of love in individuals of complex and sensitive nature,
and the outcome of such a receptive attitude on the
part of the male is undoubtedly in well-marked cases
a desire of submission to the female’s will,
and a craving to experience in some physical or psychic
form, not necessarily painful, the manifestations of
her activity.
When we turn from vague and unpronounced
forms of the masochistic tendency to the more definite
forms in which it becomes an unquestionable sexual
perversion, we find a very eminent and fairly typical
example in Rousseau, an example all the more interesting
because here the subject has himself portrayed his
perversion in his famous Confessions. It
is, however, the name of a less eminent author, the
Austrian novelist, Sacher-Masoch, which has become
identified with the perversion through the fact that
Krafft-Ebing fixed upon it as furnishing a convenient
counterpart to the term “sadism.”
It is on the strength of a considerable number of his
novels and stories, more especially of Die Venus
im Pelz, that Krafft-Ebing took the scarcely warrantable
liberty of identifying his name, while yet living,
with a sexual perversion.
Sacher-Masoch’s biography has
been written with intimate knowledge and much
candor by C.F. von Schlichtegroll (Sacher-Masoch
und der Masochismus, 1901) and, more indirectly,
by his first wife Wanda von Sacher-Masoch in her
autobiography (Meine Lebensbeichte, 1906;
French translation, Confession de ma Vie,
1907). Schlichtegroll’s book is written
with a somewhat undue attempt to exalt his hero
and to attribute his misfortunes to his first
wife. The autobiography of the latter, however,
enables us to form a more complete picture of Sacher-Masoch’s
life, for, while his wife by no means spares herself,
she clearly shows that Sacher-Masoch was the victim
of his own abnormal temperament, and she presents
both the sensitive, refined, exalted, and generous
aspects of his nature, and his morbid, imaginative,
vain aspects.
Leopold von Sacher-Masoch was born in
1836 at Lemberg in Galicia. He was of Spanish,
German, and more especially Slavonic race. The
founder of the family may be said to be a certain
Don Matthias Sacher, a young Spanish nobleman,
in the sixteenth century, who settled in Prague.
The novelist’s father was director of police
in Lemberg and married Charlotte von Masoch, a
Little Russian lady of noble birth. The novelist,
the eldest child of this union, was not born until
after nine years of marriage, and in infancy was
so delicate that he was not expected to survive.
He began to improve, however, when his mother
gave him to be suckled to a robust Russian peasant
woman, from whom, as he said later, he gained
not only health, but “his soul”; from her
he learned all the strange and melancholy legends
of her people and a love of the Little Russians
which never left him. While still a child young
Sacher-Masoch was in the midst of the bloody scenes
of the revolution which culminated in 1848.
When he was 12 the family migrated to Prague,
and the boy, though precocious in his development,
then first learned the German language, of which he
attained so fine a mastery. At a very early
age he had found the atmosphere, and even some
of the most characteristic elements, of the peculiar
types which mark his work as a novelist.
It is interesting to trace the germinal
elements of those peculiarities which so strongly
affected his imagination on the sexual side.
As a child, he was greatly attracted by representations
of cruelty; he loved to gaze at pictures of executions,
the legends of martyrs were his favorite reading, and
with the onset of puberty he regularly dreamed
that he was fettered and in the power of a cruel
woman who tortured him. It has been said
by an anonymous author that the women of Galicia either
rule their husbands entirely and make them their slaves
or themselves sink to be the wretchedest of slaves.
At the age of 10, according to Schlichtegroll’s
narrative, the child Leopold witnessed a scene
in which a woman of the former kind, a certain Countess
Xenobia X., a relative of his own on the paternal side,
played the chief part, and this scene left an undying
impress on his imagination. The Countess
was a beautiful but wanton creature, and the child
adored her, impressed alike by her beauty and
the costly furs she wore. She accepted his devotion
and little services and would sometimes allow
him to assist her in dressing; on one occasion,
as he was kneeling before her to put on her ermine
slippers, he kissed her feet; she smiled and gave
him a kick which filled him with pleasure.
Not long afterward occurred the episode which
so profoundly affected his imagination. He
was playing with his sisters at hide-and-seek and
had carefully hidden himself behind the dresses
on a clothes-rail in the Countess’s bedroom.
At this moment the Countess suddenly entered the
house and ascended the stairs, followed by a lover,
and the child, who dared not betray his presence,
saw the countess sink down on a sofa and begin
to caress her lover. But a few moments later
the husband, accompanied by two friends, dashed into
the room. Before, however, he could decide which
of the lovers to turn against the Countess had
risen and struck him so powerful a blow in the
face with her fist that he fell back streaming
with blood. She then seized a whip, drove all
three men out of the room, and in the confusion
the lover slipped away. At this moment the
clothes-rail fell and the child, the involuntary witness
of the scene, was revealed to the Countess, who now
fell on him in anger, threw him to the ground,
pressed her knee on his shoulder, and struck him
unmercifully. The pain was great, and yet
he was conscious of a strange pleasure. While
this castigation was proceeding the Count returned,
no longer in a rage, but meek and humble as a
slave, and kneeled down before her to beg forgiveness.
As the boy escaped he saw her kick her husband.
The child could not resist the temptation to return
to the spot; the door was closed and he could
see nothing, but he heard the sound of the whip
and the groans of the Count beneath his wife’s
blows.
It is unnecessary to insist that in
this scene, acting on a highly sensitive and somewhat
peculiar child, we have the key to the emotional
attitude which affected so much of Sacher-Masoch’s
work. As his biographer remarks, woman became
to him, during a considerable part of his life,
a creature at once to be loved and hated, a being
whose beauty and brutality enabled her to set her
foot at will on the necks of men, and in the heroine
of his first important novel, the Emissaer,
dealing with the Polish Revolution, he embodied
the contradictory personality of Countess Xenobia.
Even the whip and the fur garments, Sacher-Masoch’s
favorite emotional symbols, find their explanation
in this early episode. He was accustomed
to say of an attractive woman: “I should
like to see her in furs,” and, of an unattractive
woman: “I could not imagine her in
furs.” His writing-paper at one time was
adorned with the figure of a woman in Russian Boyar
costume, her cloak lined with ermine, and brandishing
a scourge. On his walls he liked to have
pictures of women in furs, of the kind of which
there is so magnificent an example by Rubens in the
gallery at Munich. He would even keep a woman’s
fur cloak on an ottoman in his study and stroke
it from time to time, finding that his brain thus
received the same kind of stimulation as Schiller
found in the odor of rotten apples.
At the age of 13, in the revolution
of 1848, young Sacher-Masoch received his baptism
of fire; carried away in the popular movement,
he helped to defend the barricades together with a
young lady, a relative of his family, an amazon
with a pistol in her girdle, such as later he
loved to depict. This episode was, however,
but a brief interruption of his education; he pursued
his studies with brilliance, and on the higher
side his education was aided by his father’s
esthetic tastes. Amateur theatricals were
in special favor at his home, and here even the serious
plays of Goethe and Gogol were performed, thus
helping to train and direct the boy’s taste.
It is, perhaps, however, significant that it was
a tragic event which, at the age of 16, first brought
to him the full realization of life and the consciousness
of his own power. This was the sudden death
of his favorite sister. He became serious
and quiet, and always regarded this grief as a turning-point
in his life.
At the Universities of Prague and Graz
he studied with such zeal that when only 19 he
took his doctor’s degree in law and shortly
afterward became a privatdocent for German
history at Graz. Gradually, however, the
charms of literature asserted themselves definitely,
and he soon abandoned teaching. He took part,
however, in the war of 1866 in Italy, and at the
battle of Solferino he was decorated on the field
for bravery in action by the Austrian field-marshal.
These incidents, however, had little disturbing
influence on Sacher-Masoch’s literary career,
and he was gradually acquiring a European reputation
by his novels and stories.
A far more seriously disturbing influence
had already begun to be exerted on his life by
a series of love-episodes. Some of these were
of slight and ephemeral character; some were a source
of unalloyed happiness, all the more so if there
was an element of extravagance to appeal to his
Quixotic nature. He always longed to give
a dramatic and romantic character to his life, his
wife says, and he spent some blissful days on
an occasion when he ran away to Florence with
a Russian princess as her private secretary.
Most often these episodes culminated in deception and
misery. It was after a relationship of this
kind from which he could not free himself for
four years that he wrote Die Geschiedene Frau,
Passionsgeschichte eines Idealisten, putting into
it much of his own personal history. At one time
he was engaged to a sweet and charming young girl.
Then it was that he met a young woman at Graz,
Laura Ruemelin, 27 years of age, engaged as a
glove-maker, and living with her mother. Though
of poor parentage, with little or no knowledge
of the world, she had great natural ability and
intelligence. Schlichtegroll represents her
as spontaneously engaging in a mysterious intrigue
with the novelist. Her own detailed narrative
renders the circumstances more intelligible.
She approached Sacher-Masoch by letter, adopting
for disguise the name of his heroine Wanda von Dunajev,
in order to recover possession of some compromising
letters which had been written to him, as a joke,
by a friend of hers. Sacher-Masoch insisted
on seeing his correspondent before returning the
letters, and with his eager thirst for romantic adventure
he imagined that she was a married woman of the aristocratic
world, probably a Russian countess, whose simple costume
was a disguise. Not anxious to reveal the prosaic
facts, she humored him in his imaginations and
a web of mystification was thus formed. A
strong attraction grew up on both sides and, though
for some time Laura Ruemelin maintained the mystery
and held herself aloof from him, a relationship
was formed and a child born. Thereupon, in
1893, they married. Before long, however,
there was disillusion on both sides. She began
to detect the morbid, chimerical, and unpractical
aspects of his character, and he realized that
not only was his wife not an aristocrat, but,
what was of more importance to him, she was by no means
the domineering heroine of his dreams. Soon
after marriage, in the course of an innocent romp
in which the whole of the small household took
part, he asked his wife to inflict a whipping on him.
She refused, and he thereupon suggested that the servant
should do it; the wife failed to take this idea
seriously; but he had it carried out, with great
satisfaction at the severity of the castigation
he received. When, however, his wife explained
to him that, after this incident, it was impossible
for the servant to stay, Sacher-Masoch quite agreed
and she was at once discharged. But he constantly
found pleasure in placing his wife in awkward
or compromising circumstances, a pleasure she was too
normal to share. This necessarily led to much
domestic wretchedness. He had persuaded her,
against her wish, to whip him nearly every day,
with whips which he devised, having nails attached
to them. He found this a stimulant to his literary
work, and it enabled him to dispense in his novels
with his stereotyped heroine who is always engaged
in subjugating men, for, as he explained to his
wife, when he had the reality in his life he was no
longer obsessed by it in his imaginative dreams.
Not content with this, however, he was constantly
desirous for his wife to be unfaithful. He
even put an advertisement in a newspaper to the effect
that a young and beautiful woman desired to make the
acquaintance of an energetic man. The wife,
however, though she wished to please her husband,
was not anxious to do so to this extent.
She went to an hotel by appointment to meet a stranger
who had answered this advertisement, but when she
had explained to him the state of affairs he chivalrously
conducted her home. It was some time before
Sacher-Masoch eventually succeeded in rendering
his wife unfaithful. He attended to the minutest
details of her toilette on this occasion, and as
he bade her farewell at the door he exclaimed:
“How I envy him!” This episode thoroughly
humiliated the wife, and from that moment her love
for her husband turned to hate. A final separation
was only a question of time. Sacher-Masoch
formed a relationship with Hulda Meister, who
had come to act as secretary and translator to him,
while his wife became attached to Rosenthal, a
clever journalist later known to readers of the
Figaro as “Jacques St.-Cere,” who
realized her painful position and felt sympathy
and affection for her. She went to live with
him in Paris and, having refused to divorce her
husband, he eventually obtained a divorce from her;
she states, however, that she never at any time
had physical relationships with Rosenthal, who
was a man of fragile organization and health.
Sacher-Masoch united himself to Hulda Meister,
who is described by the first wife as a prim and faded
but coquettish old maid, and by the biographer
as a highly accomplished and gentle woman, who
cared for him with almost maternal devotion.
No doubt there is truth in both descriptions.
It must be noted that, as Wanda clearly shows,
apart from his abnormal sexual temperament, Sacher-Masoch
was kind and sympathetic, and he was strongly
attached to his eldest child. Eulenburg also
quotes the statement of a distinguished Austrian woman
writer acquainted with him that, “apart from
his sexual eccentricities, he was an amiable,
simple, and sympathetic man with a touchingly
tender love for his children.” He had very
few needs, did not drink or smoke, and though
he liked to put the woman he was attached to in
rich furs and fantastically gorgeous raiment he
dressed himself with extreme simplicity. His wife
quotes the saying of another woman that he was
as simple as a child and as naughty as a monkey.
In 1883 Sacher-Masoch and Hulda Meister
settled in Lindheim, a village in Germany near
the Taunus, a spot to which the novelist seems
to have been attached because in the grounds of his
little estate was a haunted and ruined tower associated
with a tragic medieval episode. Here, after
many legal delays, Sacher-Masoch was able to render
his union with Hulda Meister legitimate; here two
children were in due course born, and here the novelist
spent the remaining years of his life in comparative
peace. At first, as is usual, treated with
suspicion by the peasants, Sacher-Masoch gradually
acquired great influence over them; he became
a kind of Tolstoy in the rural life around him, the
friend and confidant of all the villagers (something
of Tolstoy’s communism is also, it appears,
to be seen in the books he wrote at this time),
while the theatrical performances which he inaugurated,
and in which his wife took an active part, spread
the fame of the household in many neighboring villages.
Meanwhile his health began to break up; a visit
to Nauheim in 1894 was of no benefit, and he died
March 9, 1895.
A careful consideration of the phenomena
of sadism and masochism may be said to lead us to
the conclusion that there is no real line of demarcation.
Even De Sade himself was not a pure sadist, as Bloch’s
careful definition is alone sufficient to indicate;
it might even be argued that De Sade was really a
masochist; the investigation of histories of sadism
and masochism, even those given by Krafft-Ebing (as,
indeed, Colin Scott and Fere have already pointed
out), constantly reveals traces of both groups of
phenomena in the same individual. They cannot,
therefore, be regarded as opposed manifestations.
This has been felt by some writers, who have, in consequence,
proposed other names more clearly indicating the relationship
of the phenomena. Fere speaks of sexual algophily;
he only applies the term to masochism; it might equally
well be applied to sadism. Schrenck-Notzing, to
cover both sadism and masochism, has invented the
term algolagnia (algos, pain, and lagnos sexually
excited), and calls the former active, the latter passive,
algolagnia. Eulenburg has also emphasized the close
connection between these groups of perverted sexual
manifestations, and has adopted the same terms, adding
the further group of ideal (illusionary) algolagnia,
to cover the cases in which the mere autosuggestive
representation of pain, inflicted or suffered, suffices
to give sexual gratification.
A brief discussion of the terms “sadism”
and “masochism” has imposed itself upon
us at this point because as soon as, in any study of
the relationship between love and pain, we pass over
the limits of normal manifestations into a region
which is more or less abnormal, these two conceptions
are always brought before us, and it was necessary
to show on what grounds they are here rejected as
the pivots on which the discussion ought to turn.
We may accept them as useful terms to indicate two
groups of clinical phenomena; but we cannot regard
them as of any real scientific value. Having
reached this result, we may continue our consideration
of the love-bite, as the normal manifestation of the
connection between love and pain which most naturally
leads us across the frontier of the abnormal.
The result of the love-bite in its
extreme degree is to shed blood. This cannot
be regarded as the direct aim of the bite in its normal
manifestations, for the mingled feelings of close contact,
of passionate gripping, of symbolic devouring, which
constitute the emotional accompaniments of the bite
would be too violently discomposed by actual wounding
and real shedding of blood. With some persons,
however, perhaps more especially women, the love-bite
is really associated with a conscious desire, even
if more or less restrained, to draw blood, a real delight
in this process, a love of blood. Probably this
only occurs in persons who are not absolutely normal,
but on the borderland of the abnormal. We have
to admit that this craving has, however, a perfectly
normal basis. There is scarcely any natural object
with so profoundly emotional an effect as blood, and
it is very easy to understand why this should be so.
Moreover, blood enters into the sphere of courtship
by virtue of the same conditions by which cruelty
enters into it; they are both accidents of combat,
and combat is of the very essence of animal and primitive
human courtship, certainly its most frequent accompaniment.
So that the repelling or attracting fascination of
blood may be regarded as a by-product of normal courtship,
which, like other such by-products, may become an
essential element of abnormal courtship.
Normally the fascination of blood,
if present at all during sexual excitement, remains
more or less latent, either because it is weak or
because the checks that inhibit it are inevitably very
powerful. Occasionally it becomes more clearly
manifest, and this may happen early in life.
Fere records the case of a man of Anglo-Saxon origin,
of sound heredity so far as could be ascertained and
presenting no obvious stigmata of degeneration, who
first experienced sexual manifestations at the age
of 5 when a boy cousin was attacked by bleeding at
the nose. It was the first time he had seen such
a thing and he experienced erection and much pleasure
at the sight. This was repeated the next time
the cousin’s nose bled and also whenever he
witnessed any injuries or wounds, especially when
occurring in males. A few years later he began
to find pleasure in pinching and otherwise inflicting
slight suffering. This sadism was not, however,
further developed, although a tendency to inversion
persisted.
Somewhat similar may have been the origin
of the attraction of blood in a case which has
been reported to me of a youth of 17, the youngest
of a large family who are all very strong and entirely
normal. He is himself, however, delicate, overgrown,
with a narrow chest, a small head, and babyish
features, while mentally he is backward, with
very defective memory and scant powers of assimilation.
He is intensely nervous, peevish, and subject
to fits of childish rage. He takes violent fancies
to persons of his own sex. But he appears
to have only one way of obtaining sexual excitement
and gratification. It is his custom to get
into a hot bath and there to produce erection and
emission, not by masturbation, but by thinking
of flowing blood. He does not associate himself
with the causation of this imaginary flow of blood;
he is merely the passive but pleased spectator.
He is aware of his peculiarity and endeavors to shake
it off, but his efforts to obtain normal pleasure
by thinking of a girl are vain.
I may here narrate a case
which has been communicated to me of
algolagnia in a woman, combined
with sexual hyperesthesia.
R.D., aged 25, married, and
of good social position; she is a
small and dark woman, restless
and alert in manner. She has one
child.
She has practised masturbation from
an early age-ever since she can remember-by
the method of external friction and pressure.
From the age of 17 she was able (and is still)
to produce the orgasm almost without effort, by
calling up the image of any man who had struck
her fancy. She has often done so while seated
talking to such a man, even when he is almost a
stranger; in doing it, she says, a tightening
of the muscles of the thighs and the slightest
movement are sufficient. Ugly men (if not deformed),
as well as men with the reputation of being roues,
greatly excite her sexually, more especially if
of good social position, though this is not essential.
At the age of 18 she became hysterical,
probably, she herself believes, in consequence
of a great increase at that time of indulgence
in masturbation. The doctors, apparently suspecting
her habits, urged her parents to get her married
early. She married, at the age of 20, a man
about twice her own age.
As a child (and in a less degree still)
she was very fond of watching dog-fights.
This spectacle produced strong sexual feelings
and usually orgasm, especially if much blood was shed
during the fight. Clean cuts and wounds greatly
attract her, whether on herself or a man.
She has frequently slightly cut or scratched herself
“to see the blood,” and likes to suck the
wound, thinking the taste “delicious.”
This produces strong sexual feelings and often
orgasm, especially if at the time she thinks of
some attractive man and imagines that she is sucking
his blood. The sight of injury to a woman
only very slightly affects her, and that, she
thinks, only because of an involuntary association
of ideas. Nor has the sight of suffering in illness
any exciting effects, only that which is due to
violence, and when there is a visible cause for
the suffering, such as cuts and wounds. (Bruises,
from the absence of blood, have only a slight effect.)
The excitement is intensified if she imagines that
she has herself inflicted the injury. She
likes to imagine that the man wished to rape her,
and that she fought him in order to make him more
greatly value her favor, so wounding him.
Impersonal ideas of torture also excite
her. She thinks Fox’s Book of Martyrs
“lovely,” and the more horrible and bloody
the tortures described the greater is the sexual
excitement produced. The book excites her
from the point of view of the torturer, not that
of the victim. She has frequently masturbated
while reading it.
So far as practicable she has sought
to carry out these ideas in her relations with
her husband. She has several times bitten him
till the blood came and sucked the bite during
coitus. She likes to bite him enough to make
him wince. The pleasure is greatly heightened
by thinking of various tortures, chiefly by cutting.
She likes to have her husband talk to her, and
she to him, of all the tortures they could inflict
on each other. She has, however, never actually
tried to carry out these tortures. She would like
to, but dares not, as she is sure he could not
endure them. She has no desire for her husband
to try them on her, although she likes to hear
him talk about it.
She is at the same time fond of normal
coitus, even to excess. She likes her husband
to remain entirely passive during connection,
so that he can continue in a state of strong erection
for a long time. She can thus, she says, procure
for herself the orgasm a number of times in succession,
even nine or ten, quite easily. On one occasion
she even had the orgasm twenty-six times within
about one and a quarter hours, her husband during this
time having two orgasms. (She is quite certain
about the accuracy of this statement.) During
this feat much talk about torture was indulged
in, and it took place after a month’s separation
from her husband, during which she was careful
not to masturbate, so that she might have “a
real good time” when he came back. She
acknowledges that on this occasion she was a “complete
wreck” for a couple of days afterward, but
states that usually ten or a dozen orgasms (or
spasms, as she terms them) only make her “feel
lively.” She becomes frenzied with excitement
during intercourse and insensible to everything
but the pleasure of it.
She has never hitherto allowed anyone
(except her husband after marriage) to know of
her sadistic impulses, nor has she carried them
out with anyone, though she would like to, if she dared.
Nor has she allowed any man but her husband to
have connection with her or to take any liberties.
Outbursts of sadism may occur episodically
in fairly normal persons. Thus, Coutagne describes
the case of a lad of 17-always regarded
as quite normal, and without any signs of degeneracy,
even on careful examination, or any traces of hysteria
or alcoholism, though there was insanity among his
cousins-who had had occasional sexual relations
for a year or two, and on one occasion, being in a
state of erection, struck the girl three times on
the breast and abdomen with a kitchen knife bought
for the purpose. He was much ashamed of his act
immediately afterward, and, all the circumstances
being taken into consideration, he was acquitted by
the court. Here we seem to have the obscure and
latent fascination of blood, which is almost normal,
germinating momentarily into an active impulse which
is distinctly abnormal, though it produced little beyond
those incisions which Vatsyayana disapproved of, but
still regarded as a part of courtship. One step
more and we are amid the most outrageous and extreme
of all forms of sexual perversion: with the heroes
of De Sade’s novels, who, in exemplification
of their author’s most cherished ideals, plan
scenes of debauchery in which the flowing of blood
is an essential element of coitus; with the Marshall
Gilles de Rais and the Hungarian Countess Bathory,
whose lust could only be satiated by the death of
innumerable victims.
This impulse to stab-with
no desire to kill, or even in most cases to give
pain, but only to draw blood and so either stimulate
or altogether gratify the sexual impulse-is
no doubt the commonest form of sanguinary sadism.
These women-stabbers have been known in France
as piqueurs for nearly a century, and in
Germany are termed Stecher or Messerstecher
(they have been studied by Naecke, “Zur
Psychologie der sadistischen Messerstecher,”
Archiv fuer Kriminal-Anthropologie, Bd.
35, 1909). A case of this kind where a man
stabbed girls in the abdomen occurred in Paris
in the middle of the eighteenth century, and in
1819 or 1820 there seems to have been an epidemic
of piqueurs in Paris; as we learn from a
letter of Charlotte von Schiller’s to Knebel;
the offenders (though perhaps there was only one)
frequented the Boulevards and the Palais Royal and
stabbed women in the buttocks or thighs; they were
never caught. About the same time similar
cases of a slighter kind occurred in London, Brussels,
Hamburg, and Munich.
Stabbers are nearly always men, but
cases of the same perversion in women are not
unknown. Thus Dr. Kiernan informs me of an Irish
woman, aged 40, and at the beginning of the menopause,
who, in New York in 1909, stabbed five men with
a hatpin. The motive was sexual and she told
one of the men that she stabbed him because she
“loved” him.
Gilles de Rais, who had fought beside
Joan of Arc, is the classic example of sadism
in its extreme form, involving the murder of youths
and maidens. Bernelle considers that there is
some truth in the contention of Huysmans that
the association with Joan of Arc was a predisposing
cause in unbalancing Gilles de Rais. Another
cause was his luxurious habit of life. He himself,
no doubt rightly, attached importance to the suggestions
received in reading Suetonius. He appears
to have been a sexually precocious child, judging
from an obscure passage in his confessions. He
was artistic and scholarly, fond of books, of
the society of learned men, and of music.
Bernelle sums him up as “a pious warrior, a
cruel and keen artist, a voluptuous assassin, an
exalted mystic,” who was at the same time
unbalanced, a superior degenerate, and morbidly
impulsive. (The best books on Gilles de Rais are the
Abbe Bossard’s Gilles de Rais, in
which, however, the author, being a priest, treats
his subject as quite sane and abnormally wicked;
Huysmans’s novel, La-Bas, which embodies
a detailed study of Gilles de Rais, and F.H.
Bernelle’s These de Paris, La Psychose
de Gilles de Rais, 1910.)
The opinion has been hazarded that the
history of Gilles de Rais is merely a legend.
This view is not accepted, but there can be no
doubt that the sadistic manifestations which occurred
in the Middle Ages were mixed up with legendary
and folk-lore elements. These elements centered
on the conception of the werwolf, supposed
to be a man temporarily transformed into a wolf with
blood-thirsty impulses. (See, e.g., articles
“Werwolf” and “Lycanthropy”
in Encyclopædia Britannica.) France, especially,
was infested with werwolves in the sixteenth century.
In 1603, however, it was decided at Bordeaux,
in a trial involving a werwolf, that lycanthropy
was only an insane delusion. Dumas ("Les
Loup-Garous,” Journal de Psychologie
Normale et Pathologique, May-June, 1907) argues
that the medieval werwolves were sadists whose
crimes were largely imaginative, though sometimes
real, the predecessor of the modern Jack the Ripper.
The complex nature of the elements making up the
belief in the werwolf is emphasized by Ernest
Jones, Der Alptraum, 1912.
Related to the werwolf, but distinct,
was the vampire, supposed to be a dead
person who rose from the dead to suck the blood of
the living during sleep. By way of reprisal
the living dug up, exorcised, and mutilated the
supposed vampires. This was called vampirism.
The name vampire was then transferred to the living
person who had so treated a corpse. All profanation
of the corpse, whatever its origin, is now frequently
called vampirism (Epaulow, Vampirisme,
These de Lyon, 1901; id., “Le Vampire du
Muy,” Archives d’Anthropologie
Criminelle, Sept., 1903). The earliest
definite reference to necrophily is in Herodotus, who
tells (bk. ii, ch. lxxxix) of an Egyptian
who had connection with the corpse of a woman
recently dead. Epaulow gives various old cases
and, at full length, the case which he himself investigated,
of Ardisson, the “Vampire du Muy.”
W.A.F. Browne also has an interesting article
on “Necrophilism” (Journal of Mental
Science, Jan., 1875) which he regards as atavistic.
When there is, in addition, mutilation of the
corpse, the condition is termed necrosadism.
There seems usually to be no true sadism in either
necrosadism or necrophilism. (See, however, Bloch,
Beitraege, vol. ii, et seq.)
It must be said also that cases of rape
followed by murder are quite commonly not sadistic.
The type of such cases is represented by Soleilland,
who raped and then murdered children. He
showed no sadistic perversion. He merely killed
to prevent discovery, as a burglar who is interrupted
may commit murder in order to escape. (E.
Dupre, “L’Affaire Soleilland,” Archives
d’Anthropologie Criminelle, Jan.-Feb.,
1910.)
A careful and elaborate study of a completely
developed sadist has been furnished by Lacassagne,
Rousset, and Papillon ("L’Affaire Reidal,”
Archives d’Anthropologie Criminelle,
Oct.-Nov., 1907). Reidal, a youth of 18, a
seminarist, was a congenital sanguinary sadist
who killed another youth and was finally sent
to an asylum. From the age of 4 he had voluptuous
ideas connected with blood and killing, and liked
to play at killing with other children. He
was of infantile physical development, with a
pleasant, childish expression of face, very religious,
and hated obscenity and immorality. But the love
of blood and murder was an irresistible obsession
and its gratification produced immense emotional
relief.
Sadism generally has been especially
studied by Lacassagne, Vacher l’Eventreur
et les Crimes Sadiques, 1899. Zooesadism,
or sadism toward animals, has been dealt with
by P. Thomas, “Le Sadisme sur
les Animaux,” Archives d’Anthropologie
Criminelle, Sept., 1903. Auto-sadism,
or “auto-erotic cruelty,” that is to say,
injuries inflicted on a person by himself with a sexual
motive, has been investigated by G. Bach (Sexuelle
Verrirungen des Menschen und der Nature, ; this condition seems, however, a form of
algolagnia more masochistic than sadistic in character.
With regard to the medico-legal aspects,
Kiernan ("Responsibility in Active Algophily,”
Medicine, April, 1903) sets forth the reasons
in favor of the full and complete responsibility of
sadists, and Harold Moyer comes to the same conclusion
("Is Sexual Perversion Insanity?” Alienist
and Neurologist, May, 1907). See also
Thoinot’s Medico-legal Aspects of Moral Offenses
(edited by Weysse, 1911), ch. xviii. While
we are probably justified in considering the sadist
as morally not insane in the technical sense,
we must remember that he is, for the most part,
highly abnormal from the outset. As Gaupp points
out (Sexual-Problème, Oct., 1909, ,
we cannot measure the influences which create
the sadist and we must not therefore attempt to
“punish” him, but we are bound to place
him in a position where he will not injure society.
It is enough here to emphasize the
fact that there is no solution of continuity in the
links that bind the absolutely normal manifestations
of sex with the most extreme violations of all human
law. This is so true that in saying that these
manifestations are violations of all human law we
cannot go on to add, what would seem fairly obvious,
that they are violations also of all natural law.
We have but to go sufficiently far back, or sufficiently
far afield, in the various zooelogical series to find
that manifestations which, from the human point of
view, are in the extreme degree abnormally sadistic
here become actually normal. Among very various
species wounding and rending normally take place at
or immediately after coitus; if we go back to the
beginning of animal life in the protozoa sexual conjugation
itself is sometimes found to present the similitude,
if not the actuality, of the complete devouring of
one organism by another. Over a very large part
of nature, as it has been truly said, “but a
thin veil divides love from death."
There is, indeed, on the whole, a
point of difference. In that abnormal sadism
which appears from time to time among civilized human
beings it is nearly always the female who becomes
the victim of the male. But in the normal sadism
which occurs throughout a large part of nature it is
nearly always the male who is the victim of the female.
It is the male spider who impregnates the female at
the risk of his life and sometimes perishes in the
attempt; it is the male bee who, after intercourse
with the queen, falls dead from that fatal embrace,
leaving her to fling aside his entrails and calmly
pursue her course. If it may seem to some that
the course of our inquiry leads us to contemplate with
equanimity, as a natural phenomenon, a certain semblance
of cruelty in man in his relations with woman, they
may, if they will, reflect that this phenomenon is
but a very slight counterpoise to that cruelty which
has been naturally exerted by the female on the male
long even before man began to be.