Flagellation as a Typical Illustration
of Algolagnia-Causes of Connection between
Sexual Emotion and Whipping-Physical Causes-Psychic
Causes probably more Important-The Varied
Emotional Associations of Whipping-Its
Wide Prevalence.
The whole problem of love and pain,
in its complementary sadistic and masochistic aspects,
is presented to us in connection with the pleasure
sometimes experienced in whipping, or in being whipped,
or in witnessing or thinking about scenes of whipping.
The association of sexual emotion with bloodshed is
so extreme a perversion, it so swiftly sinks to phases
that are obviously cruel, repulsive, and monstrous
in an extreme degree, that it is necessarily rare,
and those who are afflicted by it are often more or
less imbecile. With whipping it is otherwise.
Whipping has always been a recognized religious penance;
it is still regarded as a beneficial and harmless
method of chastisement; there is nothing necessarily
cruel, repulsive, or monstrous in the idea or the
reality of whipping, and it is perfectly easy and
natural for an interest in the subject to arise in
an innocent and even normal child, and thus to furnish
a germ around which, temporarily at all events, sexual
ideas may crystallize. For these reasons the
connection between love and pain may be more clearly
brought out in connection with whipping than with
blood.
There is, by no means, any necessary
connection between flagellation and the sexual emotions.
If there were, this form of penance would not have
been so long approved or at all events tolerated by
the Church.
As a matter of fact, indeed, it was
not always approved or even tolerated. Pope Adrian
IV in the eighth century forbade priests to beat their
penitents, and at the time of the epidemic of flagellation
in the thirteenth century, which was highly approved
by many holy men, the abuses were yet so frequent
that Clement VI issued a bull against these processions.
All such papal prohibitions remained without effect.
The association of religious flagellation with perverted
sexual motives is shown by its condemnation in later
ages by the Inquisition, which was accustomed to prosecute
the priests who, in prescribing flagellation as a
penance, exerted it personally, or caused it to be
inflicted on the stripped penitent in his presence,
or made a woman penitent discipline him, such offences
being regarded as forms of “solicitation."
There seems even to be some reason to suppose that
the religious flagellation mania which was so prevalent
in the later Middle Ages, when processions of penitents,
male and female, eagerly flogged themselves and each
other, may have had something to do with the discovery
of erotic flagellation, which, at all events
in Europe, seems scarcely to have been known before
the sixteenth century. It must, in any case, have
assisted to create a predisposition. The introduction
of flagellation as a definitely recognized sexual
stimulant is by Eulenburg, in his interesting book,
Sadismus und Masochismus, attributed to the
Arabian physicians. It would appear to have been
by the advice of an Arabian physician that the Duchess
Leonora Gonzaga, of Mantua, was whipped by her mother
to aid her in responding more warmly to her husband’s
embraces and to conceive.
Whatever the precise origin of sexual
flagellation in Europe, there can be no doubt that
it soon became extremely common, and so it remains
at the present day. Those who possess a special
knowledge of such matters declare that sexual flagellation
is the most frequent of all sexual perversions in
England. This belief is, I know, shared by many
people both inside and outside England. However
this may be, the tendency is certainly common.
I doubt if it is any or at all less common in Germany,
judging by the large number of books on the subject
of flagellation which have been published in German.
In a catalogue of “interesting books” on
this and allied subjects issued by a German publisher
and bookseller, I find that, of fifty-five volumes,
as many as seventeen or eighteen, all in German, deal
solely with the question of flagellation, while many
of the other books appear to deal in part with the
same subject. It is, no doubt, true that the
large part which the rod has played in the past history
of our civilization justifies a considerable amount
of scientific interest in the subject of flagellation,
but it is clear that the interest in these books is
by no means always scientific, but very frequently
sexual.
It is remarkable that, while the sexual
associations of whipping, whether in slight or
in marked degrees, are so frequent in modern times,
they appear to be by no means easy to trace in ancient
times. “Flagellation,” I find
it stated by a modern editor of the Priapeia,
“so extensively practised in England as a provocation
to venery, is almost entirely unnoticed by the
Latin erotic writers, although, in the Satyricon
of Petronius (ch. cxxxviii), Encolpius, in
describing the steps taken by OEnothea to undo
the temporary impotence to which he was subjected,
says: ’Next she mixed nasturtium-juice
with southern wood, and, having bathed my foreparts,
she took a bunch of green nettles, and gently
whipped my belly all over below the navel.’”
It appears also that many ancient courtesans dedicated
to Venus as ex-votos a whip, a bridle, or
a spur as tokens of their skill in riding their
lovers. The whip was sometimes used in antiquity,
but if it aroused sexual emotions they seem to
have passed unregarded. “We naturally
know nothing,” Eulenburg remarks (Sadismus
und Masochismus, , “of the feelings
of the priestess of Artemis at the flagellation
of Spartan youths; or what emotions inspired the
priestess of the Syrian goddess under similar circumstances;
or what the Roman Pontifex Maximus felt when he castigated
the exposed body of a negligent vestal (as described
by Plutarch) behind a curtain, and the ‘plagosus
Orbilius’ only practised on children.”
It was at the Renaissance that cases
of abnormal sexual pleasure in flagellation began
to be recorded. The earliest distinct reference
to a masochistic flagellant seems to have been made
by Pico della Mirandola, toward the
end of the fifteenth century, in his Disputationes
Adversus Astrologiam Divinatricem, bk. iii, ch.
xxvii. Coelius Rhodiginus in 1516, again, narrated
the case of a man he knew who liked to be severely
whipped, and found this a stimulant to coitus.
Otto Brunfels, in his Onomasticon (1534),
art. “Coitus,” refers to another case
of a man who could not have intercourse with his
wife until he had been whipped. Then, a century
later, in 1643, Meibomius wrote De Usu Flagrorum
in re Venerea, the earliest treatise on this
subject, narrating various cases. Numerous
old cases of pleasure in flagellation and urtication
were brought together by Schurig in 1720 in his Spermatologia,
pp. 253-258.
The earliest definitely described medical
case of sadistic pleasure in the sight of active
whipping which I have myself come across belongs
to the year 1672, and occurs in a letter in which
Nesterus seeks the opinion of Garmann. He
knows intimately, he states, a very learned man-whose
name, for the honor he bears him, he refrains
from mentioning-who, whenever in a school
or elsewhere he sees a boy unbreeched and birched,
and hears him crying out, at once emits semen
copiously without any erection, but with great
mental commotion. The same accident frequently
happens to him during sleep, accompanied by dreams
of whipping. Nesterus proceeds to mention
that this “laudatus vir” was also
extremely sensitive to the odor of strawberries
and other fruits, which produced nausea.
He was evidently a neurotic subject. (L.C.F.
Garmanni et Aliorum Virorum Clarissimorum, Epistolarum
Centuria, Rostochi et Lipsiae, 1714.)
In England we find that toward the end
of the sixteenth century one of Marlowe’s
epigrams deals with a certain Francus who before intercourse
with his mistress “sends for rods and strips
himself stark naked,” and by the middle
of the seventeenth century the existence of an
association between flagellation and sexual pleasure
seems to have been popularly recognized. In 1661,
in a vulgar “tragicomedy” entitled
The Presbyterian Lash, we find: “I
warrant he thought that the tickling of the wench’s
buttocks with the rod would provoke her to lechery.”
That whipping was well known as a sexual stimulant
in England in the eighteenth century is sufficiently
indicated by the fact that in one of Hogarth’s
series representing the “Harlot’s Progress”
a birch rod hangs over the bed. The prevalence
of sexual flagellation in England at the end of
that century and the beginning of the nineteenth
is discussed by Duehren (Iwan Bloch) in his Geschlechtsleben
in England (1901-3), especially vol. ii, ch.
vi.
While, however, the evidence regarding
sexual flagellation is rare, until recent times
whipping as a punishment was extremely common.
It is even possible that its very prevalence, and the
consequent familiarity with which it was regarded,
were unfavorable to the development of any mysterious
emotional state likely to act on the sexual sphere,
except in markedly neurotic subjects. Thus,
the corporal chastisement of wives by husbands was
common and permitted. Not only was this so to
a proverbial extent in eastern Europe, but also
in the extreme west and among a people whose women
enjoyed much freedom and honor. Cymric law allowed
a husband to chastise his wife for angry speaking,
such as calling him a cur; for giving away property
she was not entitled to give away; or for being
found in hiding with another man. For the
first two offenses she had the option of paying him
three kine. When she accepted the chastisement
she was to receive “three strokes with a
rod of the length of her husband’s forearm and
the thickness of his long finger, and that wheresoever
he might will, excepting on the head”; so
that she was to suffer pain only, and not injury.
(R.B. Holt, “Marriage Laws and Customs
of the Cymri,” Journal of the Anthropological
Institute, August-November, 1898, .)
“The Cymric law,” writes
a correspondent, “seems to have survived in
popular belief in the Eastern and Middle States of
the United States. In police-courts in New
York, for example, it has been unsuccessfully
pleaded that a man is entitled to beat his wife with
a stick no thicker than his thumb. In Pennsylvania
actual acquittals have been rendered.”
Among all classes children were severely
whipped by their parents and others in authority
over them. It may be recalled that in the twelfth
century when Abelard became tutor to Heloise, then
about 18 years of age, her uncle authorized him
to beat her, if negligent in her studies.
Even in the sixteenth century Jeanne d’Albert,
who became the mother of Henry IV of France, at the
age of 131/2 was married to the Duke of Cleves,
and to overcome her resistance to this union the
Queen, her mother, had her whipped to such an
extent that she thought she would die of it. The
whip on this occasion was, however, only partially
successful, for the Duke never succeeded in consummating
the marriage, which was, in consequence, annulled.
(Cabanes brings together numerous facts regarding
the prevalence of flagellation as a chastisement in
ancient France in the interesting chapter on “La
Flagellation a la Cour et a la
Ville” in his Indiscretions de l’Histoire,
1903.)
As to the prevalence of whipping in
England evidence is furnished by Andrews, in the
chapter on “Whipping and Whipping Posts,”
in his book on ancient punishments. It existed
from the earliest times and was administered for
a great variety of offenses, to men and women
alike, for vagrancy, for theft, to the fathers and
mothers of illegitimate children, for drunkenness,
for insanity, even sometimes for small-pox.
At one time both sexes were whipped naked, but
from Queen Elizabeth’s time only from the waist
upward. In 1791 the whipping of female vagrants
ceased by law. (W. Andrews, Bygone
Punishments, 1899.)
It must, however, be remarked that law
always lags far behind social feeling and custom,
and flagellation as a common punishment had fallen
into disuse or become very perfunctory long before
any change was made in the law, though it is not absolutely
extinct, even by law, today. There is even an
ignorant and retrograde tendency to revive it.
Thus, even in severe Commonwealth days, the alleged
whipping with rods of a servant-girl by her master,
though with no serious physical injury, produced
a great public outcry, as we see by the case of the
Rev. Zachary Crofton, a distinguished London clergyman,
who was prosecuted in 1657 on the charge of whipping
his servant-girl, Mary Cadman, because she lay
in bed late in the morning and stole sugar.
This incident led to several pamphlets. In
The Presbyterian, Lash or Noctroff’s Maid
Whipt (1661), a satire on Crofton, we read:
“It is not only contrary to Gospel but good
manners to take up a wench’s petticoats, smock
and all”; and in the doggerel ballad of
“Bo-Peep,” which was also written on
the same subject, it is said that Crofton should have
left his wife to chastise the maid. Crofton
published two pamphlets, one under his own name
and one under that of Alethes Noctroff (1657), in
which he elaborately dealt with the charge as both
false and frivolous. In one passage he offers
a qualified defense of such an act: “I
cannot but bewail the exceeding rudeness of our times
to suffer such foolery to be prosecuted as of some
high and notorious crime. Suppose it were
(as it is not) true, may not some eminent congregational
brother be found guilty of the same act?
Is it not much short of drinking an health naked on
a signpost? May it not be as theologically
defended as the husband’s correction of
his wife?” This passage, and the whole episode,
show that feeling in regard to this matter was at that
time in a state of transition.
Flagellation as a penance, whether inflicted
by the penitent himself or by another person,
was also extremely common in medieval and later
days. According to Walsingham ("Master of the
Rolls’ Collection,” vol. i, , in England, in the middle of the fourteenth
century, penitents, sometimes men of noble birth,
would severely flagellate themselves, even to the
shedding of blood, weeping or singing as they
did so; they used cords with knots containing
nails.
At a later time the custom of religious
flagellation was more especially preserved in
Spain. The Countess d’Aulnoy, who visited
Spain in 1685, has described the flagellations
practised in public at Madrid. After giving
an account of the dress worn by these flagellants,
which corresponds to that worn in Spain in Holy
Week at the present time by the members of the Cofradías,
the face concealed by the high sugar-loaf head-covering,
she continues: “They attach ribbons
to their scourges, and usually their mistresses
honor them with their favors. In gaining public
admiration they must not gesticulate with the arm,
but only move the wrist and hand; the blows must
be given without haste, and the blood must not
spoil the costume. They make terrible wounds
on their shoulders, from which the blood flows
in streams; they march through the streets with
measured steps; they pass before the windows of
their mistresses, where they flagellate themselves
with marvelous patience. The lady gazes at
this fine sight through the blinds of her room,
and by a sign she encourages him to flog himself,
and lets him understand how much she likes this sort
of gallantry. When they meet a good-looking woman
they strike themselves in such a way that the
blood goes on to her; this is a great honor, and
the grateful lady thanks them.... All this
is true to the letter.”
The Countess proceeds to describe other
and more genuine penitents, often of high birth,
who may be seen in the street naked above the
waist, and with naked feet on the rough and sharp
pavement; some had swords passed through the skin
of their body and arms, others heavy crosses that
weighed them down. She remarks that she was
told by the Papal Nuncio that he had forbidden
confessors to impose such penances, and that they were
due to the devotion of the penitents themselves.
(Relation du Voyage d’Espagne, 1692,
vol. ii, pp. 158-164.)
The practice of public self-flagellation
in church during Lent existed in Spain and Portugal
up to the early years of the nineteenth century.
Descriptions of it will often be met with in old
volumes of travel. Thus, I find a traveler through
Spain in 1786 describing how, at Barcelona, he
was present when, in Lent, at a Miserere in the
Convent Church of San Felipe Neri on Friday evening
the doors were shut, the lights put out, and in perfect
darkness all bared their backs and applied the
discipline, singing while they scourged themselves,
ever louder and harsher and with ever greater
vehemence until in twenty minutes’ time the
whole ended in a deep groan. It is mentioned
that at Malaga, after such a scene, the whole
church was in the morning sprinkled with blood.
(Joseph Townsend, A Journey through Spain in 1786,
vol. i, ; vol. iii, .)
Even to our own day religious self-flagellation
is practised by Spaniards in the Azores, in the
darkened churches during Lent, and the walls are
often spotted and smeared with blood at this time.
(O.H. Howarth, “The Survival of Corporal
Punishment,” Journal Anthropological
Institute, Feb., 1889.) In remote districts
of Spain (as near Haro in Rioja) there are also brotherhoods
who will flagellate themselves on Good Friday, but
not within the church. (Dario de Regoyos, Espana
Negra, 1899, .)
When we glance over the history of
flagellation and realize that, though whipping as
a punishment has been very widespread and common, there
have been periods and lands showing no clear knowledge
of any sexual association of whipping, it becomes
clear that whipping is not necessarily an algolagnic
manifestation. It seems evident that there must
be special circumstances, and perhaps a congenital
predisposition, to bring out definitely the relationship
of flagellation to the sexual impulse. Thus,
Loewenfeld considers that only about 1 per cent, of
people can be sexually excited by flagellation of
the buttocks, and Naecke also is decidedly of
opinion that there can be no sexual pleasure in flagellation
without predisposition, which is rare. On these
grounds many are of opinion that physical chastisement,
provided it is moderate, seldom applied, and only
to children who are quite healthy and vigorous, need
not be absolutely prohibited. But, however rare
and abnormal a sexual response to actual flagellation
may be in adults, we shall see that the general sexual
association of whipping in the minds of children, and
frequently of their elders, is by; no means rare and
scarcely abnormal.
What is the cause of the connection
between sexual emotion and whipping? A very simple
physical cause has been believed by some to account
fully for the phenomena. It is known that strong
stimulation of the gluteal region may, especially
under predisposing conditions, produce or heighten
sexual excitement, by virtue of the fact that both
regions are supplied by branches of the same nerve.
There is another reason why whipping
should exert a sexual influence. As Fere especially
has pointed out, in moderate amount it has a tonic
effect, and as such has a general beneficial result
in stimulating the whole body. This fact was,
indeed, recognized by the classic physicians, and Galen
regarded flagellation as a tonic. Thus, not only
must it be said that whipping, when applied to the
gluteal region, has a direct influence in stimulating
the sexual organs, but its general tonic influence
must naturally extend to the sexual system.
It is possible that we must take into
account here a biological factor, such as we have
found involved in other forms of sadism and masochism.
In this connection a lady writes to me: “With
regard to the theory which connects the desire
for whipping with the way in which animals make
love, where blows or pressure on the hindquarters
are almost a necessary preliminary to pleasure, have
you ever noticed the way in which stags behave?
Their does seem as timid as the males are excitable,
and the blows inflicted on them by the horns of
their mates to reduce them to submission must
be, I should think, an exact equivalent to being beaten
with a stick.”
It is remarkable that in some cases
the whip would even appear to have a psychic influence
in producing sexual excitement in animals accustomed
to its application as a stimulant to action.
Thus, Professor Cornevin, of Lyons, describes the
case of a Hungarian stallion, otherwise quite
potent, in whom erection could only be produced
in the presence of a mare in heat when a whip
was cracked near him, and occasionally applied gently
to his legs. (Cornevin, Archives d’Anthropologie
Criminelle, January, 1896.)
Here, undoubtedly, we have a definite
anatomical and physiological relationship which often
serves as a starting-point for the turning of the
sexual feelings in this direction, and will sometimes
support the perversion when it has otherwise arisen.
But this relationship, even if we regard it as a fairly
frequent channel by which sexual emotion is aroused,
will not suffice to account for most, or even many,
of the cases in which whipping exerts a sexual fascination.
In many, if not most, cases it is found that the idea
of whipping asserts its sexual significance quite
apart from any personal experience, even in persons
who have never been whipped; not seldom also
in persons who have been whipped and who feel nothing
but repugnance for the actual performance, attractive
as it may be in imagination.
It is evident that we have to seek
the explanation of this phenomenon largely in psychic
causes. Whipping, whether inflicted or suffered,
tends to arouse, vaguely but massively, the very fundamental
and primitive emotions of anger and fear, which, as
we have seen, have always been associated with courtship,
and it tends to arouse them at an age when the sexual
emotions have not become clearly defined, and under
circumstances which are likely to introduce sexual
associations. From their earliest years children
have been trained to fear whipping, even when not actually
submitted to it, and an unjust punishment of this kind,
whether inflicted on themselves or others, frequently
arouses intense anger, nervous excitement, or terror
in the sensitive minds of children. Moreover,
as has been pointed out to me by a lady who herself
in early life was affected by the sexual associations
of whipping, a child only sees the naked body of elder
children when uncovered for whipping, and its sexual
charm may in part be due to this cause. We further
have to remark that the spectacle of suffering itself
is, to some extent and under some circumstances, a
stimulant of sexual emotion. It is evident that
a number of factors contribute to surround whipping
at a very early age with powerful emotional associations,
and that these associations are of such a character
that in predisposed subjects they are very easily led
into a sexual channel. Various lines of evidence
support this conclusion. Thus, from several reliable
quarters I learn that the sight of a boy being caned
at school may produce sexual excitement in the boys
who look on. The association of sexual emotion
with whipping is, again, very liable to show itself
in schoolmasters, and many cases have been recorded
in which the flogging of boys, under the stress of
this impulse, has been carried to extreme lengths.
An early and eminent example is furnished by Udall,
the humanist, at one time headmaster of Eton, who
was noted for his habit of inflicting frequent corporal
punishment for little or no cause, and who confessed
to sexual practices with the boys under his care.
Sanitchenko has called attention to
the case of a Russian functionary, a school inspector,
who every day had some fifty pupils flogged in his
presence, as evidence of a morbid pleasure in such
scenes. Even when no sexual element can be distinctly
traced, scenes of whipping sometimes exert a singular
fascination on some persons of sensitive emotional
temperament. A friend, a clergyman, who has read
many novels tells me that he has been struck by the
frequency with which novelists describe such scenes
with much luxury of detail; his list includes novels
by well-known religious writers of both sexes.
In some of these cases there is reason to believe
that the writers felt this sexual association of whipping.
It is natural that an interest in
whipping should be developed very early in childhood,
and, indeed, it enters very frequently into the games
of young children, and constitutes a much relished
element of such games, more especially among girls.
I know of many cases in which young girls between
6 and 12 years of age took great pleasure in games
in which the chief point consisted in unfastening
each other’s drawers and smacking each other,
and some of these girls, when they grew older, realized
that there was an element of sexual enjoyment in their
games. It has indeed, it seems, always been a
child’s game, and even an amusement of older
persons, to play at smacking each other’s nates.
In The Presbyter’s Lash in 1661 a young
woman is represented as stating that she had done this
as a child, and in ancient France it was a privileged
custom on Innocents’ Day (December 28th) to
smack all the young people found lying late in bed;
it was a custom which, as Clement Marot bears witness,
was attractive to lovers.
If we turn to the histories
I have brought together in Appendix B
we find various references
to whipping more or less clearly
connected with the rudimentary
sexual feelings of childhood.
I am acquainted with numerous cases
in which the idea of whipping, or the impulse
to whip or be whipped, distinctly exists, though
usually, when persisting to adult life, only in a
rudimentary form. History I in the Appendix
B presents a well-marked instance. I may
quote the remarks in another case of a lady regarding
her early feelings: “As a child the idea
of being whipped excited me, but only in connection
with a person I loved, and, moreover, one who
had the right to correct me. On one occasion
I was beaten with the back of a brush, and the pain
was sufficient to overcome any excitement; so
that, ever after, this particular form of whipping
left me unaffected, though the excitement still
remained connected with forms of which I had no experience.”
Another lady states that when a little
girl of 4 or 5 the servants used to smack her
nates with a soft brush to amuse themselves (undoubtedly,
as she now believes, this gave them a kind of
sexual pleasure); it did not hurt her, but she disliked
it. Her father used to whip her severely on
the nates at this age and onward to the age of
13, but this never gave her any pleasure.
When, however, she was about 9 she began in waking
dreams to imagine that she was whipping somebody,
and would finish by imagining that she was herself
being whipped. She would make up stories
of which the climax was a whipping, and felt at the
same time a pleasurable burning sensation in her sexual
parts; she used to prolong the preliminaries of
the story to heighten the climax; she felt more
pleasure in the idea of being whipped than of
whipping, although she never experienced any pleasure
from an actual whipping. These day-dreams were
most vivid when she was at school, between the
ages of 11 and 14. They began to fade with
the growth of affection for real persons. But
in dreams, even in adult life, she occasionally
experienced sexual excitement accompanied by images
of smacking.
Another correspondent, this time a man,
writes: “I experienced the connection
between sexual excitement and whipping long before
I knew what sexuality meant or had any notion regarding
the functions of the sexual organs. What
I now know to be distinct sexual feeling used
to occur whenever the idea of whipping arose or
the mention of whipping was made in a way to arrest
my attention. I well remember the strange,
mysterious fascination it had, even apart from
any actual physical excitement. I have been told
by many men and a few women that it was the same with
them. Even now the feeling exists sometimes,
especially when reading about whipping.”
The following confession, which I find
recorded by a German manufacturer’s wife,
corresponds with those I have obtained in England:
“When about 5 years old I was playing with a
little girl friend in the park. Our governesses
sat on a bench talking. For some reason-perhaps
because we had wandered away too far and failed
to hear a call to return-my friend aroused
the anger of the governess in charge of her.
That young lady, therefore, took her aside, raised
her dress, and vigorously smacked her with the flat
hand. I looked on fascinated, and possessed by
an inexplicable feeling to which I naively gave
myself up. The impression was so deep that
the scene and the persons concerned are still
clearly present to my mind, and I can even recall the
little details of my companion’s underclothing.”
When sexual associations are permanently brought
into play through such an early incident it is
possible that a special predisposition exists.
(Gesellschaft und Geschlecht, Bd. ii, h, .)
It would certainly seem that we must
look upon this association as coming well within the
normal range of emotional life in childhood, although
after puberty, when the sexual feelings become clearly
defined, the attraction of whipping normally tends
to be left behind as a piece of childishness, only
surviving in the background of consciousness, if at
all, to furnish a vaguely sexual emotional tone to
the subject of whipping, but not affecting conduct,
sometimes only emerging in erotic dreams.
This, however, is not invariably the
case in persons who are organically abnormal.
In such cases, and especially, it would seem, in highly
sensitive and emotional children, the impress left
by the fact or the image of whipping may be so strong
that it affects not only definitely, but permanently,
the whole subsequent course of development of the sexual
impulse. Regis has recorded a case which well
illustrates the circumstances and hereditary conditions
under which the idea of whipping may take such firm
root in the sexual emotional nature of a child as to
persist into adult life; at the same time the case
shows how a sexual perversion may, in an intelligent
person, take on an intellectual character, and it
also indicates a rational method of treatment.
Jules P., aged 22, of good heredity
on father’s side, but bad on that of mother,
who is highly hysterical, while his grandmother was
very impulsive and sometimes pursued other women with
a knife. He has one brother and one sister,
who are somewhat morbid and original. He
is himself healthy, intelligent, good looking, and
agreeable, though with slightly morbid peculiarities.
At the age of 4 or 5 he suddenly opened a door
and saw his sister, then a girl of 14 or 15, kneeling,
with her clothes raised and her head on her governess’s
lap, at the moment of being whipped for some offense.
This trivial incident left a profound impression on
his mind, and he recalls every detail of it, especially
the sight of his sister’s buttocks,-round,
white, and enormous as they seemed to his childish
eyes,-and that momentary vision gave a
permanent direction to the whole of his sexual
life. Always after that he desired to touch
and pat his sister’s gluteal regions. He
shared her bed, and, though only a child, acquired
great skill in attaining his ends without attracting
her attention, lifting her night-gown when she
slept and gently caressing the buttocks, also contriving
to turn her over on to her stomach and then make a
pillow of her hips. This went on until the
age of 7, when he began to play with two little
girls of the neighborhood, the eldest of whom
was 10; he liked to take the part of the father and
whip them. The older girl was big for her age,
and he would separate her drawers and smack her
with much voluptuous emotion; so that he frequently
sought opportunities to repeat the experience,
to which the girl willingly lent herself, and they
were constantly together in dark corners, the girl
herself opening her drawers to enable him to caress
her thighs and buttocks with his hand until he
became conscious of an erection. Sometimes
he would gently use a whip. On one occasion she
asked him if he would not now like to see her
in front, but he declined.
One day, when 8 or 9 years old, being
with a boy companion, he came upon a picture of
a monk being flagellated, and thereupon persuaded
his companion to let himself be whipped; the boy enjoyed
the experience, which was therefore often repeated.
Jules P. himself, however, never took the slightest
pleasure in playing the passive part. These
practices were continued even after the friend
became a conscript, when, however, they became very
rare. Only once or twice has he ever done
anything of this kind to girls who were strangers
to him. Nor has he ever masturbated or had
any desire for sexual intercourse. He contents
himself with the pleasure of being occasionally
able to witness scenes of whipping in public places-parks
and gardens-or of catching glimpses
of the thighs and buttocks of young girls or, if possible,
women.
His principal enjoyment is in imagination.
From the first he has loved to invent stories
in which whippings were the climax, and at 13
such stories produced the first spontaneous emission.
Thus, he imagines, for instance, a young girl
from the country who comes up to Paris by train;
on the way a lady is attracted by her, takes an
interest in her, brings her home to dinner, and at
last can no longer resist the temptation to take
the girl in her arms and whip her amorously.
He writes out these scenes and illustrates them
with drawings, many of which Regis reproduces.
He has even written comedies in which whipping
plays a prominent part. He has, moreover,
searched public libraries for references to flagellation,
inserted queries in the Intermediare des Chercheurs
et des Curieux, and thus obtained a complete bibliography
of flagellation which is of considerable value.
Regis is acquainted with these Archives de la
Fessee, and states that they are carried on
with great method and care. He is especially
interested in the whipping of women by women.
He considers that the pleasure of whippings should
always be shared by the person whipped, and he
is somewhat concerned to find that he has an increasing
inclination to imagine an element of cruelty in
the whipping. Emissions are somewhat frequent.
According to the latest information, he is much
better; he has entered into sexual relationship
with a woman who is much in love with him, and
to whom he has confided his peculiarities. With
her aid and suggestions he has been able to have
intercourse with her, at the moment of coitus
whipping her with a harmless India-rubber tube.
(E. Regis, “Un Cas de
Perversion Sexuelle, a forme Sadique,”
Archives d’Anthropologie Criminelles,
July, 1899.)
In a case also occurring in a highly
educated man (narrated by Marandon de Montyel)
a doctor of laws, brilliantly intellectual and
belonging to a family in which there had been some
insanity, when at school at the age of 11, saw
for the first time a schoolfellow whipped on the
nates, and experienced a new pleasure and emotion.
He was never himself whipped at school, but would
invent games with his sisters and playfellows in
which whipping formed an essential part.
At the age of 13 he teased a young woman, a cook,
until she seized him and whipped him. He put his
arms around her and experienced his first voluptuous
spasm of sex. The love of flagellation temporarily
died out, however, and gave place to masturbation
and later to a normal attraction to women.
But at the age of 32 the old ideas were aroused anew
by a story his mistress told him. He suffered
from various obsessions and finally committed
suicide. (Marandon de Montyel, “Obsessions
et Vie Sexuelle,” Archives
de Neurologie, Oct., 1904.)
In a case that has been reported to
me, somewhat similar ideas played a part.
The subject is a tall, well-developed man, aged 28,
delicate in childhood, but now normal in health and
physical condition, though not fond of athletics.
His mental ability is much above the average,
especially in scientific directions; he was brought
up in narrow and strict religious views, but at an
early age developed agnostic views of his own.
From the age of 6, and perhaps earlier,
he practised masturbation almost every night.
This was a habit which he carried on in all innocence.
It was as invariable a preliminary, he states, to
going to sleep as was lying down, and at this period
he would have felt no hesitation in telling all
about it had the question been asked. At
the age of 12 or 13 he recognized the habit as abnormal,
and fear of ridicule then caused him to keep silence
and to avoid observation. In carrying it out
he would lie on his stomach with the penis directed
downward, and not up, and the thumb resting on
the region above the root of the penis. There
was desire for micturition after the act, and when
that was satisfied sound sleep followed.
When he realized that the habit was abnormal he
began to make efforts to discontinue it, and these
efforts have been continued up to the present.
The chief obstacle has been the difficulty of
sleep without carrying out the practice.
Emissions first began to occur at the age of 13 and
at first caused some alarm. During the six
following years indulgence was irregular, sometimes
occurring every other night and sometimes with
a week’s intermission. Then at the age of
19 the habit was broken for a year, during which
nocturnal emissions took place during sleep about
every three weeks. Since this, shorter periods
of non-indulgence have occurred, these periods always
coinciding with unusual mental or physical strain,
as of examinations. He has some degree of
attraction for women; this is strongest during
cessation from masturbation and tends to disappear
when the habit is resumed. He has never had sexual
intercourse because he prefers his own method of
gratification and feels great abhorrence for professional
prostitutes; he could not afford to marry.
Any indecency or immorality, except (he observes)
his own variety, disgusts him.
At the earliest period no mental images
accompanied the act of masturbation. At about
the age of 8, however, sexual excitement began
to be constantly associated with ideas of being whipped.
At or soon after this age only the fear of disgrace
prevented him from committing serious childish
offenses likely to be punished by a good whipping.
Parents and masters, however, seem to have used
corporal punishment very sparingly.
At first this desire was for whipping
in general, without reference to the operator.
Soon after the age of 10, however, he began to
wish that certain boy friends should be the operators.
At about the same time definite desire arose for
closer contact with these friends and later for
definite indecent acts which, however, the subject
failed to specify; he probably meant mutual masturbation.
These desires were under control, and the fear of
ridicule seems to have been the chief restraining
cause. At about the age of 15 he began to
realize that such acts might be considered morally
bad and wrong, and this led to reticence and careful
concealment. Up to the age of 20 there were four
definite attachments to persons of his own sex.
There was a tendency, sometimes, to regard women
as possible whippers, and this became stronger
at 22, the images of the two sexes then mingling in
his thoughts of flagellation. Latterly the
mental accompaniments of masturbation have been
less personal, lapsing into the mental picture
of being whipped by an unknown and vague somebody.
When definite it has always been a man, and preferably
of the type of a schoolmaster. His desire
has been for punishment by whips, canes, or birches,
especially upon the buttocks. He has always shrunk
from the thought of the production of blood or bruises.
He wishes, in mental contemplation, for a punishment
sufficiently severe to make him anxious to stop
it, and yet not able to stop it. He also
takes pleasure in the idea of being tied up so as to
be unable to move.
He has at times indulged in
self-whipping, of no great severity.
In the preceding case we see a tendency
to erotic self-flagellation which in a minor degree
is not uncommon. Occasionally it becomes
highly developed. Max Marcuse has presented
such a case in elaborate detail (Zeitschrift fuer
die Gesamte Neurologie, 1912, h, fully
summarized in Sexual-Problème, Nov., 1912,
pp. 815-820). This is the case of a
Catholic priest of highly neurotic heredity, who spontaneously
began to whip himself at the age of 12, this self-flagellation
being continued and accompanied by masturbation
after the age of 15. Other associated perversions
were Narcissism and nates fetichism, as well as
homosexual phantasies. He experienced a certain
pleasure (with erection, not ejaculation) in punishing
his boy pupils. It is not uncommon for all
forms of erotic flagellation to be associated
with a homosexual element. I have elsewhere
brought forward a case of this kind (the case of A.F.,
vol. ii of these Studies).
Significant is Rousseau’s account
of the origin of his own masochistic pleasure
in whipping at the age of 8: “Mademoiselle
Lambercier showed toward me a mother’s affection
and also a mother’s authority, which she
sometimes carried so far as to inflict on us the
usual punishment of children when we had deserved
it. For a long time she was content with the threat,
and that threat of a chastisement which for me
was quite new seemed very terrible; but after
it had been executed I found the experience less
terrible than the expectation had been; and, strangely
enough, this punishment increased my affection for
her who had inflicted it. It needed all my
affection and all my natural gentleness to prevent
me from seeking a renewal of the same treatment
by deserving it, for I had found in the pain and even
in the shame of it an element of sensuality which left
more desire than fear of receiving the experience
again from the same hand. It is true that,
as in all this a precocious sexual element was
doubtless mixed, the same chastisement if inflicted
by her brother would not have seemed so pleasant.”
He goes on to say that the punishment was inflicted
a second time, but that that time was the last,
Mademoiselle Lambercier having apparently noted
the effects it produced, and, henceforth, instead of
sleeping in her room, he was placed in another
room and treated by her as a big boy. “Who
would have believed,” he adds, “that this
childish punishment, received at the age of 8 from
the hand of a young woman of 30, would have determined
my tastes, my desires, my passions, for the rest
of my life?” He remarks that this strange
taste drove him almost to madness, but maintained
the purity of his morals, and the joys of love
existed for him chiefly in imagination. (J.J.
Rousseau, Les Confessions, partie i, livre
i.) It will be seen how all the favoring conditions
of fear, shame, and precocious sexuality were
here present in an extremely sensitive child destined
to become the greatest emotional force of his
century, and receptive to influences which would
have had no permanent effect on any ordinary child.
(When, as occasionally happens, the first sexual
feelings are experienced under the stimulation
of whipping in normal children, no permanent perversion
necessarily follows; Moll mentions that he knows
such cases, Zeitschrift fuer Paedagogie, Psychiatrie,
und Pathologie, 1901.) It may be added that
it is, perhaps, not fanciful to see a certain
inevitableness in the fact that on Rousseau’s
highly sensitive and receptive temperament it was a
masochistic germ that fell and fructified, while
on Regis’s subject, with his more impulsive
ancestral antecedents, a sadistic germ found favorable
soil.
It may be noted that in Regis’s
sadistic case the little girl who was the boy’s
playmate found scarcely less pleasure in the passive
part of whipping than he found in the active.
There is ample evidence to show that this is very
often the case, and that the attractiveness of
the idea of being whipped often even arises spontaneously
in children. Lombroso (La Donna Delinquente,
refers to a girl of 7 who had voluptuous
pleasure in being whipped, and Hammer (Monatschrift
fuer Harnkrankheiten, 1906, speaks
of a young girl who similarly experienced pleasure
in punishment by whipping. Krafft-Ebing records
the case of a girl of between 6 and 8 years of
age, never at that time having been whipped or
seen anyone else whipped, who spontaneously acquired-how
she did not know-the desire to be castigated
in this manner. It gave her very great pleasure
to imagine a woman friend doing this to her.
She never desired to be whipped by a man, though
there was no trace of inversion, and she never masturbated
until the age of 24, when a marriage engagement was
broken off. At the age of 10 this longing
passed away before it was ever actually realized.
(Krafft-Ebing, Psychopathia Sexualis, eighth
edition, .)
In the case of another young woman described
by Krafft-Ebing-where there was neurasthenia
with other minor morbid conditions in the family,
but the girl herself appears to have been sound-the
desire to be whipped existed from a very early
age. She traced it to the fact that when she was
5 years old a friend of her father’s playfully
placed her across his knees and pretended to whip
her. Since then she has always longed to
be caned, but to her great regret the wish has never
been realized. She longs to be the slave
of a man whom she loves: “Lying in
fancy before him, he puts one foot on my neck while
I kiss the other. I revel in the idea of
being whipped by him and imagine different scenes
in which he beats me. I take the blows as
so many tokens of love; he is at first extremely kind
and tender, but then in the excess of his love
he beats me. I fancy that to beat me for
love’s sake gives him the highest pleasure.”
Sometimes she imagines that she is his slave, but
not his female slave, for every woman may be her
husband’s slave. She is of proud and
independent nature in all other matters, and to imagine
herself a man who consents to be a slave gives
her a more satisfying sense of humiliation.
She does not understand that these manifestations
are of a sexual nature. (Krafft-Ebing, Psychopathia
Sexualis, English translation of tenth edition,
.)
Sometimes a woman desires to take the
active part in whipping. Thus Marandon de
Montyel records the case of a girl of 19, hereditarily
neuropathic (her father was alcoholic), but very intelligent
and good-hearted, who had never been whipped or seen
anyone whipped. At this age, however, she
happened to visit a married friend who was just
about to punish her boy of 9 by whipping him with
a wet towel. The girl spectator was much interested,
and though the boy screamed and struggled she experienced
a new sensation she could not define. “At
every stroke,” she said, “a strange
shiver went through all my body from my brain
to my heels.” She would like to have whipped
him herself and felt sorry when it was over.
She could not forget the scene and would dream
of herself whipping a boy. At last the desire
became irresistible and she persuaded a boy of 12,
whom she was very fond of, and who was much attached
to her, to let her whip him on the naked nates.
She did this so ferociously that he at last fainted.
She was overcome by grief and remorse. (Marandon
de Montyel, Archives d’Anthropologie Criminelle,
Jan., 1906, .)
Although masochism in a pronounced degree
may be said to be rare in women, the love of active
flagellation, and sadistic impulses generally
are not uncommon among them. Bloch believes they
are especially common among English women.
Cases occur from time to time of extreme harshness,
cruelty, degrading punishment, and semi-starvation
inflicted upon children. The accused are most
usually women, and when a man and woman in conjunction
are accused it appears generally to have been
the woman who played the more active part.
But it is rarely demonstrated in these cases that
the cruelty exercised had a definite sexual origin.
There is nothing, for instance, to indicate true
sadism in the famous English case in the eighteenth
century of Mrs. Brownrigg (Bloch, Geschlechtsleben
in England, vol. ii, . It may
well be, however, in many of these cases that the
real motive is sexual, although latent and unconscious.
The normal sexual impulse in women is often obscured
and disguised, and it would not be surprising
if the perverse instinct is so likewise.
It is noteworthy that a passion for
whipping may be aroused by contact with a person
who desires to be whipped. This is illustrated
by the following case which has been communicated to
me: “K. is a Jew, about 40 years of
age, apparently normal. Nothing is known
of his antecedents. He is a manufacturer with
several shops. S., an Englishwoman, aged 25,
entered his service; she is illegitimate, believed
to have been reared in a brothel kept by her mother,
is prepossessing in appearance. On entering K.’s
service S. was continually negligent and careless.
This so provoked K. that on one occasion he struck
her. She showed great pleasure and confessed
that her blunder had been deliberately intended
to arouse him to physical violence. At her suggestion
K. ultimately consented to thrash her. This
operation took place in K.’s office, S.
stripping for the purpose, and the leather driving
band from a sewing-machine was used. S. manifested
unmistakable pleasure during the flagellation,
and connection occurred after it. These thrashings
were repeated at frequent intervals, and K. found
a growing liking for the operation on his own
part. Once, at the suggestion of S., a girl of
13 employed by K. was thrashed by both K. and
S. alternately. The child complained to her
parents and K. made a money payment to them to avoid
scandal, the parents agreeing to keep silence.
Other women (Jewish tailoresses) employed by K.
were subsequently thrashed by him. He asserts
that they enjoyed the experience. Mrs. K., discovering
her husband’s infatuation for S., commenced divorce
proceedings. S. consented to leave the country
at K.’s request, but returned almost immediately
and was kept in hiding until the decree was granted.
The mutual infatuation of K. and S. continues,
though K. asserts that he cares less for her than
formerly. Flagellation has, however, now become
a passion with him, though he declares that the
practice was unknown to him before he met S. His
great fear is that he will kill S. during one
of these operations. He is convinced that S. is
not an isolated case, and that all women enjoy
flagellation. He claims that the experiences
of the numerous women whom he has now thrashed
bear out this opinion; one of them is a wealthy woman
separated from her husband, and is now infatuated
with K.”
Flagellation, more especially in its
masochistic form, is sometimes associated with
true inversion. Moll presents the case of
a young inverted woman of 26, showing, indeed, many
other minor sexual anomalies, who is sexually
excited when beaten with a switch. A whip
would not do, and the blows must only be on the nates;
she cannot imagine being beaten by a small woman.
She has often in this way been beaten by a friend,
who should be naked at the time, and must submit
afterward to cunnilinctus. (Moll, Kontraere
Sexualempfindung third edition, .)
In the preceding case there were no
masochistic ideas; it is likely that in such a
case beating is desired largely on account of
that purely physical effect to which attention has
already been called. In the same way self-beating
with a switch or whip has sometimes been spontaneously
discovered as a method of self-excitement preliminary
to masturbation. I am acquainted with a lady
of much intellectual ability, sexually normal, who
made this discovery at the age of 18, and practised
it for a time. Professor Reverdin, also,
speaks of the case of a young girl under his care
who, after having exhausted all the resources of her
intelligence, finally discovered that the climax of
enjoyment was best reached by violently whipping
her own buttocks and thighs. She had invented
for this purpose a whip composed of twelve cords
each of which terminated in a large chestnut-burr
provided with its spines. (A. Reverdin, Revue
Médicale de la Suisse Romande, January 20,
1888, .)