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+<title>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Studies in the Psychology of Sex, Volume 2 (of 6), by Havelock Ellis</title>
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+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 13611 ***</div>
+
+<h1><a name='2_Page_i'></a>STUDIES<br />
+<br />
+IN THE<br />
+<br />
+PSYCHOLOGY OF SEX</h1>
+
+<h2>VOLUME II</h2>
+
+<h3>SEXUAL INVERSION</h3>
+
+<h3>BY</h3>
+
+<h2>HAVELOCK ELLIS</h2>
+
+<h4>THIRD EDITION, REVISED AND ENLARGED</h4>
+
+<h5>1927</h5>
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<h2><a name='2_Page_ii'></a>
+<a name='2_PREFACE_TO_THE_THIRD_EDITION'></a><a name='2_Page_iii'></a>PREFACE TO THE THIRD EDITION.</h2>
+
+<p>It has been remarked by Professor Wilhelm Ostwald that the problem of
+homosexuality is a problem left over to us by the Middle Ages, which for
+five hundred years dealt with inverts as it dealt with heretics and
+witches. To regard the matter thus is to emphasize its social and
+humanitarian interest rather than its biological and psychological
+significance. It is no doubt this human interest of the question of
+inversion, rather than its scientific importance, great as the latter is,
+which is mainly responsible for the remarkable activity with which the
+study of homosexuality has been carried on during recent years.</p>
+
+<p>The result has been that, during the fourteen years that have passed since
+the last edition of this <i>Study</i> was issued, so vast an amount of work has
+been carried on in this field that the preparation of a new edition of the
+book has been a long and serious task. Nearly every page has been
+rewritten or enlarged and the Index of Authors consulted has more than
+doubled in length. The original portions of the book have been still more
+changed; sixteen new Histories have been added, selected from others in my
+possession as being varied, typical, and full.</p>
+
+<p>These extensive additions to the volume have rendered necessary various
+omissions. Many of the shorter and less instructive Histories contained in
+earlier editions have been omitted, as well as three Appendices which no
+longer seem of sufficient interest to retain. In order to avoid undue
+increase in the size of this volume, already much larger than in the
+previous editions, a new Study of Eonism, or sexo-esthetic inversion, will
+be inserted in vol. v, where it will perhaps be at least as much in place
+as here.</p>
+
+<p>HAVELOCK ELLIS.</p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<h2><a name='2_Page_iv'></a>
+<a name='2_PREFACE_TO_FIRST_EDITION'></a><a name='2_Page_v'></a>PREFACE TO FIRST EDITION.</h2>
+
+<p>It was not my intention to publish a study of an abnormal manifestation of
+the sexual instinct before discussing its normal manifestations. It has
+happened, however, that this part of my work is ready first, and, since I
+thus gain a longer period to develop the central part of my subject, I do
+not regret the change of plan.</p>
+
+<p>I had not at first proposed to devote a whole volume to sexual inversion.
+It may even be that I was inclined to slur it over as an unpleasant
+subject, and one that it was not wise to enlarge on. But I found in time
+that several persons for whom I felt respect and admiration were the
+congenital subjects of this abnormality. At the same time I realized that
+in England, more than in any other country, the law and public opinion
+combine to place a heavy penal burden and a severe social stigma on the
+manifestations of an instinct which to those persons who possess it
+frequently appears natural and normal. It was clear, therefore, that the
+matter was in special need of elucidation and discussion.</p>
+
+<p>There can be no doubt that a peculiar amount of ignorance exists regarding
+the subject of sexual inversion. I know medical men of many years' general
+experience who have never, to their knowledge, come across a single case.
+We may remember, indeed, that some fifteen years ago the total number of
+cases recorded in scientific literature scarcely equaled those of British
+race which I have obtained, and that before my first cases were published
+not a single British case, unconnected with the asylum or the prison, had
+ever been recorded. Probably not a very large number of people are even
+aware that the turning in of the sexual instinct toward persons of the
+same sex can ever be regarded as inborn, so far as any sexual instinct is
+inborn. And very few, indeed, would not be surprised if it were possible
+to <a name='2_Page_vi'></a>publish a list of the names of sexually inverted men and women who at
+the present time are honorably known in church, state, society, art, or
+letters. It could not be positively affirmed of all such persons that they
+were born inverted, but in most the inverted tendency seems to be
+instinctive, and appears at a somewhat early age. In any case, however, it
+must be realized that in this volume we are not dealing with subjects
+belonging to the lunatic asylum, or the prison. We are concerned with
+individuals who live in freedom, some of them suffering intensely from
+their abnormal organization, but otherwise ordinary members of society. In
+a few cases we are concerned with individuals whose moral or artistic
+ideals have widely influenced their fellows, who know nothing of the
+peculiar organization which has largely molded those ideals.</p>
+
+<p>I am indebted to several friends for notes, observations, and
+correspondence on this subject, more especially to one, referred to as
+&quot;Z.,&quot; and to another as &quot;Q.,&quot; who have obtained a considerable number of
+reliable histories for me, and have also supplied many valuable notes; to
+&quot;Josiah Flynt&quot; (whose articles on tramps in <i>Atlantic Monthly</i> and
+<i>Harper's Magazine</i> have attracted wide attention) for an appendix on
+homosexuality among tramps; to Drs. Kiernan, Lydston, and Talbot for
+assistance at various points noted in the text; and to Dr. K., an American
+woman physician, who kindly assisted me in obtaining cases, and has also
+supplied an appendix. Other obligations are mentioned in the text.</p>
+
+<p>All those portions of the book which are of medical or medico-legal
+interest, including most of the cases, have appeared during the last three
+years in the <i>Alienist and Neurologist</i>, the <i>Journal of Mental Science</i>,
+the <i>Centralblatt f&uuml;r Nervenheilkunde</i>, the <i>Medico-legal Journal</i>, and
+the <i>Archivo delle Psicopatie Sessuale</i>. The cases, as they appear in the
+present volume, have been slightly condensed, but nothing of genuine
+psychological interest has been omitted. Owing to some delay in the
+publication of the English edition of the work, a German translation by my
+friend, Dr. Hans Kurella, editor of the<a name='2_Page_vii'></a> <i>Centralblatt f&uuml;r
+Nervenheilkunde</i>, has already appeared (1896) in the <i>Bibliothek f&uuml;r
+Sozialwissenschaft</i>. The German edition contains some matter which has
+finally been rejected from the English edition as of minor importance; on
+the other hand, much has been added to the English edition, and the whole
+carefully revised.</p>
+
+<p>I have only to add that if it may seem that I have unduly ignored the
+cases and arguments brought forward by other writers, it is by no means
+because I wish to depreciate the valuable work done by my predecessors in
+this field. It is solely because I have not desired to popularize the
+results previously reached, but simply to bring forward my own results. If
+I had not been able to present new facts in what is perhaps a new light, I
+should not feel justified in approaching the subject of sexual inversion
+at all.</p>
+
+<p>HAVELOCK ELLIS.</p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<h2><a name='2_Page_viii'></a>
+<a name='2_CONTENTS'></a><a name='2_Page_ix'></a>CONTENTS</h2>
+<h4><a href='#2_PREFACE_TO_THE_THIRD_EDITION'>PREFACE TO THE THIRD EDITION.</a></h4>
+<h4><a href='#2_PREFACE_TO_FIRST_EDITION'>PREFACE TO FIRST EDITION.</a></h4>
+
+<h4><a href='#2_SEXUAL_INVERSION'>SEXUAL INVERSION.</a></h4>
+<h5><a href='#2_CHAPTER_I'>CHAPTER I.&mdash;INTRODUCTION.</a></h5>
+<div class='blkquot'><p>Homosexuality Among Animals&mdash;Among the Lower Human Races&mdash;The
+Albanians&mdash;The Greeks&mdash;The Eskimos&mdash;The Tribes of the Northwest United
+States&mdash;Homosexuality Among Soldiers in Europe&mdash;Indifference Frequently
+Manifested by European Lower Classes&mdash;Sexual Inversion at
+Rome&mdash;Homosexuality in Prisons&mdash;Among Men of Exceptional Intellect and
+Moral Leaders&mdash;Muret&mdash;Michelangelo&mdash;Winkelmann&mdash;Homosexuality in English
+History&mdash;Walt Whitman&mdash;Verlaine&mdash;Burton's Climatic Theory of
+Homosexuality&mdash;The Racial Factor&mdash;The Prevalence of Homosexuality Today.</p></div>
+
+<h5><a href='#2_CHAPTER_II'>CHAPTER II.&mdash;THE STUDY OF SEXUAL INVERSION.</a></h5>
+<div class='blkquot'><p>Westphal&mdash;H&ouml;ssli&mdash;Casper&mdash;Ulrichs&mdash;Krafft-Ebing&mdash;Moll&mdash;F&eacute;r&eacute;&mdash;Kiernan&mdash;Lydston&mdash;Raffalovich&mdash;Edward
+Carpenter&mdash;Hirschfeld.</p></div>
+
+<h5><a href='#2_CHAPTER_III'>CHAPTER III.&mdash;SEXUAL INVERSION IN MEN.</a></h5>
+<div class='blkquot'><p>Relatively Undifferentiated State of the Sexual Impulse in Early Life&mdash;The
+Freudian View&mdash;Homosexuality in Schools&mdash;The Question of Acquired
+Homosexuality&mdash;Latent Inversion&mdash;Retarded Inversion&mdash;Bisexuality&mdash;The
+Question of the Invert's Truthfulness&mdash;Histories.</p></div>
+
+<h5><a href='#2_CHAPTER_IV'>CHAPTER IV.&mdash;SEXUAL INVERSION IN WOMEN.</a></h5>
+<div class='blkquot'><p>Prevalence of Sexual Inversion Among Women&mdash;Among Women of Ability&mdash;Among
+the Lower Races&mdash;Temporary Homosexuality <a name='2_Page_x'></a>in Schools,
+etc.&mdash;Histories&mdash;Physical and Psychic Characteristics of Inverted
+Women&mdash;The Modern Development of Homosexuality Among Women.</p></div>
+
+<h5><a href='#2_CHAPTER_V'>CHAPTER V.&mdash;THE NATURE OF SEXUAL INVERSION.</a></h5>
+<div class='blkquot'><p>Analysis of Histories&mdash;Race&mdash;Heredity&mdash;General Health&mdash;First Appearance of
+Homosexual Impulse&mdash;Sexual Precocity and Hyperesthesia&mdash;Suggestion and
+Other Exciting Causes of Inversion&mdash;Masturbation&mdash;Attitude Toward
+Women&mdash;Erotic Dreams&mdash;Methods of Sexual Relationship&mdash;Pseudo-sexual
+Attraction&mdash;Physical Sexual Abnormalities&mdash;Artistic and Other
+Aptitudes&mdash;Moral Attitude of the Invert.</p></div>
+
+<h5><a href='#2_CHAPTER_VI'>CHAPTER VI.&mdash;THE THEORY OF SEXUAL INVERSION.</a></h5>
+<div class='blkquot'><p>What is Sexual Inversion?&mdash;Causes of Diverging Views&mdash;The Theory of
+Suggestion Unworkable&mdash;Importance of the Congenital Element in
+Inversion&mdash;The Freudian Theory&mdash;Embryonic Hermaphroditism as a Key to
+Inversion&mdash;Inversion as a Variation or &quot;Sport&quot;&mdash;Comparison with
+Color-blindness, Color-hearing, and Similar Abnormalities&mdash;What is an
+Abnormality?&mdash;Not Necessarily a Disease&mdash;Relation of Inversion to
+Degeneration&mdash;Exciting Causes of Inversion&mdash;Not Operative in the Absence
+of Predisposition.</p></div>
+
+<h5><a href='#2_CHAPTER_VII'>CHAPTER VII.&mdash;CONCLUSIONS.</a></h5>
+<div class='blkquot'><p>The Prevention of Homosexuality&mdash;The Influence of the
+School&mdash;Coeducation&mdash;The Treatment of Sexual
+Inversion&mdash;Castration&mdash;Hypnotism&mdash;Associational
+Therapy&mdash;Psycho-analysis&mdash;Mental and Physical Hygiene&mdash;Marriage&mdash;The
+Children of Inverts&mdash;The Attitude of Society&mdash;The Horror Aroused by
+Homosexuality&mdash;Justinian&mdash;The <i>Code Napol&eacute;on</i>&mdash;The State of the Law in
+Europe Today&mdash;Germany&mdash;England&mdash;What Should be our Attitude Toward
+Homosexuality?</p></div>
+
+<h4><a name='2_Page_xi'></a><a href='#2_APPENDIX_A'>APPENDIX_A.</a></h4>
+
+<p class="center">Homosexuality Among Tramps.
+</p>
+
+<h4><a href='#2_APPENDIX_B'>APPENDIX B.</a></h4>
+
+<p class="center">
+The School-friendships of Girls.
+</p>
+
+<h4><a href='#2_INDEX_OF_AUTHORS'>INDEX OF AUTHORS.</a></h4>
+<h4><a href='#2_INDEX_OF_SUBJECTS'>INDEX OF SUBJECTS.</a></h4>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<h2><a name='2_Page_xii'></a>
+<a name='2_SEXUAL_INVERSION'></a><a name='2_Page_1'></a>SEXUAL INVERSION.</h2>
+
+<h3><a name='2_CHAPTER_I'></a>CHAPTER I.&mdash;INTRODUCTION.</h3>
+
+<div class='blkquot'><p>Homosexuality Among Animals&mdash;Among the Lower Human Races&mdash;The
+Albanians&mdash;The Greeks&mdash;The Eskimos&mdash;The Tribes of the Northwest United
+States&mdash;Homosexuality Among Soldiers in Europe&mdash;Indifference Frequently
+Manifested by European Lower Classes&mdash;Sexual Inversion at
+Rome&mdash;Homosexuality in Prisons&mdash;Among Men of Exceptional Intellect and
+Moral Leaders&mdash;Muret&mdash;Michelangelo&mdash;Winkelmann&mdash;Homosexuality in English
+History&mdash;Walt Whitman&mdash;Verlaine&mdash;Burton's Climatic Theory of
+Homosexuality&mdash;The Racial Factor&mdash;The Prevalence of Homosexuality Today.</p></div>
+
+<p>Sexual inversion, as here understood, means sexual instinct turned by
+inborn constitutional abnormality toward persons of the same sex. It is
+thus a narrower term than homosexuality, which includes all sexual
+attractions between persons of the same sex, even when seemingly due to
+the accidental absence of the natural objects of sexual attraction, a
+phenomenon of wide occurrence among all human races and among most of the
+higher animals. It is only during recent years that sexual inversion has
+been recognized; previously it was not distinguished from homosexuality in
+general, and homosexuality was regarded as a national custom, as an
+individual vice, or as an unimportant episode in grave forms of
+insanity.<a name='2_FNanchor_1'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_1'><sup>[1]</sup></a> We have further to distinguish sexual inversion and all other
+forms of homosexuality from another kind of inversion which usually
+remains, so far as the <a name='2_Page_2'></a>sexual impulse itself is concerned, heterosexual,
+that is to say, normal. Inversion of this kind leads a person to feel like
+a person of the opposite sex, and to adopt, so far as possible, the
+tastes, habits, and dress of the opposite sex, while the direction of the
+sexual impulse remains normal. This condition I term sexo-esthetic
+inversion, or Eonism.</p>
+
+<div class='blkquot'><p>The nomenclature of the highly important form of sexual
+ perversion with which we are here concerned is extremely varied,
+ and most investigators have been much puzzled in coming to a
+ conclusion as to the best, most exact, and at the same time most
+ colorless names to apply to it.</p>
+
+<p> The first in the field in modern times was Ulrichs who, as early
+ as 1862, used the appellation &quot;Uranian&quot; (Uranier), based on the
+ well-known myth in Plato's <i>Banquet</i>. Later he Germanized this
+ term into &quot;Urning&quot; for the male, and &quot;Urningin&quot; for the female,
+ and referred to the condition itself as &quot;Urningtum.&quot; He also
+ invented a number of other related terms on the same basis; some
+ of these terms have had a considerable vogue, but they are too
+ fanciful and high-strung to secure general acceptance. If used in
+ other languages than German they certainly should not be used in
+ their Germanized shape, and it is scarcely legitimate to use the
+ term &quot;Urning&quot; in English. &quot;Uranian&quot; is more correct.</p>
+
+<p> In Germany the first term accepted by recognized scientific
+ authorities was &quot;contrary sexual feeling&quot; (Kontr&auml;re
+ Sexualempfindung). It was devised by Westphal in 1869, and used
+ by Krafft-Ebing and Moll. Though thus accepted by the earliest
+ authorities in this field, and to be regarded as a fairly
+ harmless and vaguely descriptive term, it is somewhat awkward,
+ and is now little used in Germany; it was never currently used
+ outside Germany. It has been largely superseded by the term
+ &quot;homosexuality.&quot; This also was devised (by a little-known
+ Hungarian doctor, Benkert, who used the pseudonym Kertbeny) in
+ the same year (1869), but at first attracted no attention. It
+ has, philologically, the awkward disadvantage of being a bastard
+ term compounded of Greek and Latin elements, but its
+ significance&mdash;sexual attraction to the same sex&mdash;is fairly clear
+ and definite, while it is free from any question-begging
+ association of either favorable or unfavorable character. (Edward
+ Carpenter has proposed to remedy its bastardly linguistic
+ character by transforming it into &quot;homogenic;&quot; this, however,
+ might mean not only &quot;toward the same sex,&quot; but &quot;of the same
+ kind,&quot; and in German already possesses actually that meaning.)
+ The term &quot;homosexual&quot; has the further advantage that on account
+ of its classical origin it is easily translatable into many
+ languages. It <a name='2_Page_3'></a>is now the most widespread general term for the
+ phenomena we are dealing with, and it has been used by
+ Hirschfeld, now the chief authority in this field, as the title
+ of his encyclopedic work, <i>Die Homosexualit&auml;t</i>.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;Sexual Inversion&quot; (in French &quot;inversion sexuelle,&quot; and in
+ Italian &quot;inversione sessuale&quot;) is the term which has from the
+ first been chiefly used in France and Italy, ever since Charcot
+ and Magnan, in 1882, published their cases of this anomaly in the
+ <i>Archives de Neurologie</i>. It had already been employed in Italy
+ by Tamassia in the <i>Revista Sperimentale di Freniatria</i>, in 1878.
+ I have not discovered when and where the term &quot;sexual inversion&quot;
+ was first used. Possibly it first appeared in English, for long
+ before the paper of Charcot and Magnan I have noticed, in an
+ anonymous review of Westphal's first paper in the <i>Journal of
+ Mental Science</i> (then edited by Dr. Maudsley) for October, 1871,
+ that &quot;Contr&auml;re Sexualempfindung&quot; is translated as &quot;inverted
+ sexual proclivity.&quot; So far as I am aware, &quot;sexual inversion&quot; was
+ first used in English, as the best term, by J. A. Symonds in 1883,
+ in his privately printed essay, <i>A Problem in Greek Ethics</i>.
+ Later, in 1897, the same term was adopted, I believe for the
+ first time publicly in English, in the present work.</p>
+
+<p> It is unnecessary to refer to the numerous other names which have
+ been proposed. (A discussion of the nomenclature will be found in
+ the first chapter of Hirschfeld's work, <i>Die Homosexualit&auml;t</i>, and
+ of some special terms in an article by Schouten,
+ <i>Sexual-Probleme</i>, December, 1912.) It may suffice to mention the
+ ancient theological and legal term &quot;sodomy&quot; (sodomia) because it
+ is still the most popular term for this perversion, though, it
+ must be remembered, it has become attached to the physical act of
+ intercourse <i>per anum</i>, even when carried out heterosexually, and
+ has little reference to psychic sexual proclivity. This term has
+ its origin in the story (narrated in Genesis, ch. xix) of Lot's
+ visitors whom the men of Sodom desired to have intercourse with,
+ and of the subsequent destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah. This
+ story furnishes a sufficiently good ground for the use of the
+ term, though the Jews do not regard sodomy as the sin of Sodom,
+ but rather inhospitality and hardness of heart to the poor (J.
+ Preuss, <i>Biblisch-Talmudische Medizin</i>, pp. 579-81), and
+ Christian theologians also, both Catholic and Protestant (see,
+ <i>e.g.</i>, <i>Jahrbuch f&uuml;r sexuelle Zwischenstufen</i>, vol. iv, p. 199,
+ and Hirschfeld, <i>Homosexualit&auml;t</i>, p. 742), have argued that it
+ was not homosexuality, but their other offenses, which provoked
+ the destruction of the Cities of the Plain. In Germany &quot;sodomy&quot;
+ has long been used to denote bestiality, or sexual intercourse
+ with animals, but this use of the term is quite unjustified. In
+ English there is another term, &quot;buggery,&quot; identical in meaning
+ with sodomy, and equally <a name='2_Page_4'></a>familiar. &quot;Bugger&quot; (in French,
+ <i>bougre</i>) is a corruption of &quot;Bulgar,&quot; the ancient Bulgarian
+ heretics having been popularly supposed to practise this
+ perversion. The people of every country have always been eager to
+ associate sexual perversions with some other country than their
+ own.</p>
+
+<p> The terms usually adopted in the present volume are &quot;sexual
+ inversion&quot; and &quot;homosexuality.&quot; The first is used more especially
+ to indicate that the sexual impulse is organically and innately
+ turned toward individuals of the same sex. The second is used
+ more comprehensively of the general phenomena of sexual
+ attraction between persons of the same sex, even if only of a
+ slight and temporary character. It may be admitted that there is
+ no precise warrant for any distinction of this kind between the
+ two terms. The distinction in the phenomena is, however, still
+ generally recognized; thus Iwan Bloch applies the term
+ &quot;homosexuality&quot; to the congenital form, and
+ &quot;pseudo-homosexuality&quot; to its spurious or simulated forms. Those
+ persons who are attracted to both sexes are now usually termed
+ &quot;bisexual,&quot; a more convenient term than &quot;psycho-sexual
+ hermaphrodite,&quot; which was formerly used. There remains the normal
+ person, who is &quot;heterosexual.&quot; </p></div>
+
+<p>Before approaching the study of sexual inversion in cases which we may
+investigate with some degree of scientific accuracy, there is interest in
+glancing briefly at the phenomena as they appear before us, as yet
+scarcely or at all differentiated, among animals, among various human
+races, and at various periods.</p>
+
+<p>Among animals in a domesticated or confined state it is easy to find
+evidence of homosexual attraction, due merely to the absence of the other
+sex.<a name='2_FNanchor_2'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_2'><sup>[2]</sup></a> This was known to the ancients; the Egyptians regarded two male
+partridges as the symbol of homosexuality, and Aristotle noted that two
+female pigeons would cover each other if no male was at hand. Buffon
+observed many examples, especially among birds. He found that, if male or
+female birds of various species&mdash;such as partridges, fowls, and
+doves&mdash;were shut up together, they would soon begin to have sexual
+relations among themselves, the males sooner and more <a name='2_Page_5'></a>frequently than the
+females. More recently Sainte-Claire Deville observed that dogs, rams, and
+bulls, when isolated, first became restless and dangerous, and then
+acquired a permanent state of sexual excitement, not obeying the laws of
+heat, and leading them to attempts to couple together; the presence of the
+opposite sex at once restored them to normal conditions.<a name='2_FNanchor_3'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_3'><sup>[3]</sup></a> Bombarda of
+Lisbon states that in Portugal it is well known that in every herd of
+bulls there is nearly always one bull who is ready to lend himself to the
+perverted whims of his companions.<a name='2_FNanchor_4'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_4'><sup>[4]</sup></a> It may easily be observed how a cow
+in heat exerts an exciting influence on other cows, impelling them to
+attempt to play the bull's part. Lacassagne has also noted among young
+fowls and puppies, etc., that, before ever having had relations with the
+opposite sex, and while in complete liberty, they make hesitating attempts
+at intercourse with their own sex.<a name='2_FNanchor_5'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_5'><sup>[5]</sup></a> This, indeed, together with similar
+perversions, may often be observed, especially in puppies, who afterward
+become perfectly normal. Among white rats, which are very sexual animals,
+Steinach found that, when deprived of females, the males practise
+homosexuality, though only with males with whom they have long associated;
+the weaker rats play the passive part. But when a female is introduced
+they immediately turn to her; although they are occasionally altogether
+indifferent to sex, they never actually prefer their own sex.<a name='2_FNanchor_6'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_6'><sup>[6]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>With regard to the playing of the female part by the weaker rats it is
+interesting to observe that F&eacute;r&eacute; found among insects that the passive part
+in homosexual relations is favored by fatigue; among cockchafers it was
+the male just separated from <a name='2_Page_6'></a>the female who would take the passive part
+(on the rare occasions when homosexual relations occurred) with a fresh
+male.<a name='2_FNanchor_7'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_7'><sup>[7]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>Homosexuality appears to be specially common among birds. It was among
+birds that it attracted the attention of the ancients, and numerous
+interesting observations have been made in more recent times. Thus Selous,
+a careful bird-watcher, finds that the ruff, the male of the <i>Machetes
+pugnax</i>, suffers from sexual repression owing to the coyness of the female
+(the reeve), and consequently the males often resort to homosexual
+intercourse. It is still more remarkable that the reeves also, even in the
+presence of the males, will court each other and have intercourse.<a name='2_FNanchor_8'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_8'><sup>[8]</sup></a> We
+may associate this with the high erotic development of birds, the
+difficulty with which tumescence seems to occur in them, and their long
+courtships.</p>
+
+<p>Among the higher animals, again, female monkeys, even when grown up (as
+Moll was informed), behave in a sexual way to each other, though it is
+difficult to say how far this is merely in play. Dr. Seitz, Director of
+the Frankfurt Zo&ouml;logical Garden, gave Moll a record of his own careful
+observations of homosexual phenomena among the males and females of
+various animals confined in the Garden (<i>Antelope cervicapra, Bos Indicus,
+Capra hircus, Ovis steatopyga</i>).<a name='2_FNanchor_9'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_9'><sup>[9]</sup></a> In all such cases we are not concerned
+with sexual inversion, but merely with the accidental turning of the
+sexual instinct into an abnormal channel, the instinct being <a name='2_Page_7'></a>called out
+by an approximate substitute, or even by diffused emotional excitement, in
+the absence of the normal object.</p>
+
+<p>It is probable, however, that cases of true sexual inversion&mdash;in which
+gratification is preferably sought in the same sex&mdash;may be found among
+animals, although observations have rarely been made or recorded. It has
+been found by Muccioli, an Italian authority on pigeons, that among
+Belgian carrier-pigeons inverted practices may occur, even in the presence
+of many of the other sex.<a name='2_FNanchor_10'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_10'><sup>[10]</sup></a> This seems to be true inversion, though we
+are not told whether these birds were also attracted toward the opposite
+sex. The birds of this family appear to be specially liable to sexual
+perversion. Thus M. J. Bailly-Maitre, a breeder of great knowledge and a
+keen observer, wrote to Girard that &quot;they are strange creatures in their
+manners and customs and are apt to elude the most persistent observer. No
+animal is more depraved. Mating between males, and still more frequently
+between females, often occurs at an early age: up to the second year. I
+have had several pairs of pigeons formed by subjects of the same sex who
+for many months behaved as if the mating were natural. In some cases this
+had taken place among young birds of the same nest, who acted like real
+mates, though both subjects were males. In order to mate them productively
+we have had to separate them and shut each of them up for some days with a
+female.&quot;<a name='2_FNanchor_11'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_11'><sup>[11]</sup></a> In the Berlin Zo&ouml;logical Gardens also, it has been noticed
+that two birds of the same sex will occasionally become attached to each
+other and remain so in spite of repeated advances from individuals of
+opposite sex. This occurred, for instance, in the case of two males of the
+Egyptian goose who were thus to all appearance paired, and always kept
+together, vigorously driving away any female that approached. Similarly a
+male Australian sheldrake was paired to a male of another species.<a name='2_FNanchor_12'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_12'><sup>[12]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>Among birds generally, inverted sexuality seems to accompany <a name='2_Page_8'></a>the
+development of the secondary sexual characters of the opposite sex which
+is sometimes found. Thus, a poultry-breeder describes a hen (colored
+Dorking) crowing like a cock, only somewhat more harshly, as a cockerel
+crows, and with an enormous comb, larger than is ever seen in the male.
+This bird used to try to tread her fellow-hens. At the same time she laid
+early and regularly, and produced &quot;grand chickens.&quot;<a name='2_FNanchor_13'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_13'><sup>[13]</sup></a> Among ducks, also,
+it has occasionally been observed that the female assumes at the same time
+both male livery and male sexual tendencies. It is probable that such
+observations will be multiplied in the future, and that sexual inversion
+in the true sense will be found commoner among animals than at present it
+appears to be.</p>
+
+<p>Traces of homosexual practices, sometimes on a large scale, have been
+found among all the great divisions of the human race. It would be
+possible to collect a considerable body of evidence under this head.<a name='2_FNanchor_14'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_14'><sup>[14]</sup></a>
+Unfortunately, however, the travellers and others on whose records we are
+dependent have been so shy of touching these subjects, and so ignorant of
+the main points for investigation, that it is very difficult to discover
+sexual inversion in the proper sense in any lower race. Travellers have
+spoken vaguely of crimes against nature without defining the precise
+relationship involved nor inquiring how far any congenital impulse could
+be distinguished.</p>
+
+<p>Looking at the phenomena generally, so far as they have been recorded
+among various lower races, we seem bound to recognize that there is a
+widespread natural instinct impelling men toward homosexual relationships,
+and that this has been sometimes, though very exceptionally, seized upon
+and developed for advantageous social purposes. On the whole, however,
+unnatural intercourse (sodomy) has been regarded as an antisocial offense,
+and punishable sometimes by the most serious penalties that could be
+invented. This was, for instance, the case in <a name='2_Page_9'></a>ancient Mexico, in Peru,
+among the Persians, in China, and among the Hebrews and Mohammedans.</p>
+
+<p>Even in very early history it is possible to find traces of homosexuality,
+with or without an implied disapproval. Its existence in Assyria and
+Babylonia is indicated by the Codex Hamurabi and by inscriptions which do
+not on the whole refer to it favorably.<a name='2_FNanchor_15'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_15'><sup>[15]</sup></a> As regards Egypt we learn from
+a Fayum papyrus, found by Flinders Petrie, translated by Griffiths, and
+discussed by Oefele,<a name='2_FNanchor_16'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_16'><sup>[16]</sup></a> that more than four thousand years ago homosexual
+practices were so ancient that they were attributed to the gods Horus and
+Set. The Egyptians showed great admiration of masculine beauty, and it
+would seem that they never regarded homosexuality as punishable or even
+reprehensible. It is notable, also, that Egyptian women were sometimes of
+very virile type, and Hirschfeld considers that intermediate sexual types
+were specially widespread among the Egyptians.<a name='2_FNanchor_17'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_17'><sup>[17]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>One might be tempted to expect that homosexual practices would be
+encouraged whenever it was necessary to keep down the population.
+Aristotle says that it was allowed by law in Crete for this end. And
+Professor Haddon tells me that at Torres Straits a native advocated sodomy
+on this ground.<a name='2_FNanchor_18'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_18'><sup>[18]</sup></a> There seems, however, on the whole, to be little
+evidence pointing to this utilization of the practice. The homosexual
+tendency appears to have flourished chiefly among warriors and warlike
+peoples. During war and the separation from women that war involves, the
+homosexual instinct tends to develop; it flourished, for instance, among
+the Carthaginians and among the Normans, as well as among the warlike
+Dorians, Scythians, Tartars, and Celts,<a name='2_FNanchor_19'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_19'><sup>[19]</sup></a> and, when there has been an
+absence of any strong moral <a name='2_Page_10'></a>feeling against it, the instinct has been
+cultivated and, idealized as a military virtue, partly because it
+counteracts the longing for the softening feminine influences of the home
+and partly because it seems to have an inspiring influence in promoting
+heroism and heightening <i>esprit de corps</i>. In the lament of David over
+Jonathan we have a picture of intimate friendship&mdash;&quot;passing the love of
+women&quot;&mdash;between comrades in arms among a barbarous, warlike race. There is
+nothing to show that such a relationship was sexual, but among warriors in
+New Caledonia friendships that were undoubtedly homosexual were recognized
+and regulated; the fraternity of arms, according to Foley,<a name='2_FNanchor_20'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_20'><sup>[20]</sup></a> complicated
+with pederasty, was more sacred than uterine fraternity. We have,
+moreover, a recent example of the same relationships recognized in a
+modern European race&mdash;the Albanians.</p>
+
+<div class='blkquot'><p>Hahn, in the course of his <i>Albanische Studien</i> (1854, p. 166),
+ says that the young men between 16 and 24 lore boys from about 12
+ to 17. A Gege marries at the age of 24 or 25, and then he
+ usually, but not always, gives up boy-love. The following passage
+ is reported by Hahn as the actual language used to him by an
+ Albanian Gege: &quot;The lover's feeling for the boy is pure as
+ sunshine. It places the beloved on the same pedestal as a saint.
+ It is the highest and most exalted passion of which the human
+ breast is capable. The sight of a beautiful youth awakens
+ astonishment in the lover, and opens the door of his heart to the
+ delight which the contemplation of this loveliness affords. Love
+ takes possession of him so completely that all his thought and
+ feeling goes out in it. If he finds himself in the presence of
+ the beloved, he rests absorbed in gazing on him. Absent, he
+ thinks of nought but him. If the beloved unexpectedly appears, he
+ falls into confusion, changes color, turns alternately pale and
+ red. His heart beats faster and impedes his breathing. He has
+ ears and eyes only for the beloved. He shuns touching him with
+ the hand, kisses him only on the forehead, sings his praise in
+ verse, a woman's never.&quot; One of these love-poems of an Albanian
+ Gege runs as follows: &quot;The sun, when it rises in the morning, is
+ like you, boy, when you are near me. When your dark eye turns
+ upon me, it drives my reason from my head.&quot;</p>
+
+<p> It should be added that Prof. Weigand, who knew the Albanians
+ well, assured Bethe (<i>Rheinisches Museum f&uuml;r Philologie</i>, 1907,
+ p. 475) that the relations described by Hahn are really sexual,
+ although tempered <a name='2_Page_11'></a>by idealism. A German scholar who travelled in
+ Albania some years ago, also, assured N&auml;cke (<i>Jahrbuch f&uuml;r
+ sexuelle Zwischenstufen</i>, vol. ix, 1908, p. 327) that he could
+ fully confirm Hahn's statements, and that, though it was
+ difficult to speak positively, he doubted whether these
+ relationships were purely ideal. While most prevalent among the
+ Moslems, they are also found among the Christians, and receive
+ the blessing of the priest in church. Jealousy is frequently
+ aroused, the same writer remarks, and even murder may be
+ committed on account of a boy.</p>
+
+<p> It may be mentioned here that among the Tschuktsches,
+ Kamschatdals, and allied peoples (according to a Russian
+ anthropological journal quoted in <i>Sexual-Probleme</i>, January,
+ 1913, p. 41) there are homosexual marriages among the men, and
+ occasionally among the women, ritually consecrated and openly
+ recognized. </p></div>
+
+<p>The Albanians, it is possible, belonged to the same stock which produced
+the Dorian Greeks, and the most important and the most thoroughly known
+case of socially recognized homosexuality is that of Greece during its
+period of highest military as well as ethical and intellectual vigor. In
+this case, as in those already mentioned, the homosexual tendency was
+frequently regarded as having beneficial results, which caused it to be
+condoned, if not, indeed, fostered as a virtue. Plutarch repeated the old
+Greek statement that the Beotians, the Lacedemonians, and the Cretans were
+the most warlike stocks because they were the strongest in love; an army
+composed of loving homosexual couples, it was held, would be invincible.
+It appears that the Dorians introduced <i>paiderastia</i>, as the Greek form of
+homosexuality is termed, into Greece; they were the latest invaders, a
+vigorous mountain race from the northwest (the region including what is
+now Albania) who spread over the whole land, the islands, and Asia Minor,
+becoming the ruling race. Homosexuality was, of course, known before they
+came, but they made it honorable. Homer never mentions it, and it was not
+known as legitimate to the &AElig;olians or the Ionians. Bethe, who has written
+a valuable study of Dorian <i>paiderastia</i>, states that the Dorians admitted
+a kind of homosexual marriage, and even had a kind of boy-marriage by
+capture, the scattered vestiges of this practice indicating, Bethe
+believes, that it was a general custom <a name='2_Page_12'></a>among the Dorians before the
+invasion of Greece. Such unions even received a kind of religions
+consecration. It was, moreover, shameful for a noble youth in Crete to
+have no lover; it spoke ill for his character. By <i>paiderastia</i> a man
+propagated his virtues, as it were, in the youth he loved, implanting them
+by the act of intercourse.</p>
+
+<p>In its later Greek phases <i>paiderastia</i> was associated less with war than
+with athletics; it was refined and intellectualized by poetry and
+philosophy. It cannot be doubted that both &AElig;schylus and Sophocles
+cultivated boy-love, while its idealized presentation in the dialogues of
+Plato has caused it to be almost identified with his name; thus in the
+early <i>Charmides</i> we have an attractive account of the youth who gives his
+name to the dialogue and the emotions he excites are described. But even
+in the early dialogues Plato only conditionally approved of the sexual
+side of <i>paiderastia</i> and he condemned it altogether in the final
+<i>Laws</i>.<a name='2_FNanchor_21'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_21'><sup>[21]</sup></a></p>
+
+<div class='blkquot'><p>The early stages of Greek <i>paiderastia</i> are very interestingly
+ studied by Bethe, &quot;Die Dorische Knabenliebe,&quot; <i>Rheinisches Museum
+ f&uuml;r Philologie</i>, 1907. J. A. Symonds's essay on the later aspects
+ of <i>paiderastia</i>, especially as reflected in Greek literature, <i>A
+ Problem in Greek Ethics</i>, is contained in the early German
+ edition of the present study, but (though privately printed in
+ 1883 by the author in an edition of twelve copies and since
+ pirated in another private edition) it has not yet been published
+ in English. <i>Paiderastia</i> in Greek poetry has also been studied
+ by Paul Brandt, <i>Jahrbuch f&uuml;r sexuelle Zwischenstufen</i>, vols.
+ viii and ix (1906 and 1907), and by Otto Knapp
+ (<i>Anthropophyteia</i>, vol. iii, pp. 254-260) who seeks to
+ demonstrate the sensual side of <i>paiderastia</i>. On the other hand,
+ Licht, working on somewhat the same lines as Bethe (<i>Zeitschrift
+ f&uuml;r Sexualwissenschaft</i>, August, 1908), deals with the ethical
+ element in <i>paiderastia</i>, points out its beneficial moral
+ influence, and argues that it was largely on this ground that it
+ was counted sacred. Licht has also published a learned study of
+ <i>paiderastia</i> in Attic comedy (<i>Anthropophyteia</i>, vol. vii,
+ 1910), and remarks that &quot;without <i>paiderastia</i> Greek comedy is
+ unthinkable.&quot; <i>Paiderastia</i> in the Greek anthology has been fully
+ explored by P. Stephanus (<i>Jahrbuch f&uuml;r sexuelle Zwischenstufen</i>,
+ vol. ix, 1908, p. 213). Kiefer, who has studied<a name='2_Page_13'></a> Socrates in
+ relation to homosexuality (O. Kiefer, &quot;Socrates und die
+ Homosexualit&auml;t,&quot; <i>Jahrbuch f&uuml;r sexuelle Zwischenstufen</i>, vol. ix,
+ 1908), concludes that he was bisexual but that his sexual
+ impulses had been sublimated. It may be added that many results
+ of recent investigation concerning <i>paiderastia</i> are summarized
+ by Hirschfeld, <i>Die Homosexualit&auml;t</i>, pp. 747-788, and by Edward
+ Carpenter, <i>Intermediate Types Among Primitive Folk</i>, 1914, part
+ ii; see also Bloch, <i>Die Prostitution</i>, vol. i, p. 232 <i>et seq.</i>,
+ and <i>Der Ursprung der Syphilis</i>, vol. ii, p. 564. </p></div>
+
+<p>It would appear that almost the only indications outside Greece of
+<i>paiderastic</i> homosexuality showing a high degree of tenderness and
+esthetic feeling are to be found in Persian and Arabian literature, after
+the time of the Abbasids, although this practice was forbidden by the
+Koran.<a name='2_FNanchor_22'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_22'><sup>[22]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>In Constantinople, as N&auml;cke was informed by German inverts living in that
+city, homosexuality is widespread, most cultivated Turks being capable of
+relations with boys as well as with women, though very few are exclusively
+homosexual, so that their attitude would seem to be largely due to custom
+and tradition. Adult males rarely have homosexual relations together; one
+of the couple is usually a boy of 12 to 18 years, and this condition of
+things among the refined classes is said to resemble ancient Greek
+<i>paiderastia</i>. But ordinary homosexual prostitution is prevalent; it is
+especially recognized in the baths which abound in Constantinople and are
+often open all night. The attendants at these baths are youths who
+scarcely need an invitation to induce them to gratify the client in this
+respect, the gratification usually consisting in masturbation, mutual or
+one-sided, as desired. The practice, though little spoken of, is carried
+on almost openly, and blackmailing is said to be unknown.<a name='2_FNanchor_23'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_23'><sup>[23]</sup></a> In the New
+Turkey, however, it is stated by Adler Bey that homosexual prostitution
+has almost disappeared.<a name='2_FNanchor_24'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_24'><sup>[24]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>There is abundant evidence to show that homosexual practices <a name='2_Page_14'></a>exist and
+have long existed in most parts of the world outside Europe, when
+subserving no obvious social or moral end. How far they are associated
+with congenital inversion is usually very doubtful. In China, for
+instance, it seems that there are special houses devoted to male
+prostitution, though less numerous than the houses devoted to females, for
+homosexuality cannot be considered common in China (its prevalence among
+Chinese abroad being due to the absence of women) and it is chiefly found
+in the north.<a name='2_FNanchor_25'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_25'><sup>[25]</sup></a> When a rich man gives a feast he sends for women to
+cheer the repast by music and song, and for boys to serve at table and to
+entertain the guests by their lively conversation. The boys have been
+carefully brought up for this occupation, receiving an excellent
+education, and their mental qualities are even more highly valued than
+their physical attractiveness. The women are less carefully brought up and
+less esteemed. After the meal the lads usually return home with a
+considerable fee. What further occurs the Chinese say little about. It
+seems that real and deep affection is often born of these relations, at
+first platonic, but in the end becoming physical, not a matter for great
+concern in the eyes of the Chinese. In the Chinese novels, often of a very
+literary character, devoted to masculine love, it seems that all the
+preliminaries and transports of normal love are to be found, while
+physical union may terminate the scene. In China, however, the law may be
+brought into action for attempts against nature even with mutual consent;
+the penalty is one hundred strokes with the bamboo and a month's
+imprisonment; if there is violence, the penalty is decapitation; I am not
+able to say how far the law is a dead letter. According to Matignon, so
+far as homosexuality exists in China, it is carried <a name='2_Page_15'></a>on with much more
+decorum and restraint than it is in Europe, and he thinks it may be put
+down to the credit of the Chinese that, unlike Europeans, they never
+practice unnatural connection with women. His account of the customs of
+the Chinese confirms Morache's earlier account, and he remarks that,
+though not much spoken of, homosexuality is not looked down upon. He gives
+some interesting details concerning the boy prostitutes. These are sold by
+their parents (sometimes stolen from them), about the age of 4, and
+educated, while they are also subjected to a special physical training,
+which includes massage of the gluteal regions to favor development,
+dilatation of the anus, and epilation (which is not, however, practised by
+Chinese women). At the same time, they are taught music, singing, drawing,
+and the art of poetry. The waiters at the restaurants always know where
+these young gentlemen are to be found when they are required to grace a
+rich man's feast. They are generally accompanied by a guardian, and
+usually nothing very serious takes place, for they know their value, and
+money will not always buy their expensive favors. They are very
+effeminate, luxuriously dressed and perfumed, and they seldom go on foot.
+There are, however, lower orders of such prostitutes.<a name='2_FNanchor_26'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_26'><sup>[26]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>Homosexuality is easily traceable in India. Dubois referred to houses
+devoted to male prostitution, with men dressed as women, and imitating the
+ways of women.<a name='2_FNanchor_27'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_27'><sup>[27]</sup></a> Burton in the &quot;Terminal Essay&quot; to his translation of
+the <i>Arabian Nights</i>, states that when in 1845 Sir Charles Napier
+conquered and annexed Sind three brothels of eunuchs and boys were found
+in the small town of Karachi, and Burton was instructed to visit and
+report on them. Hindus, in general, however, it appears, hold
+<a name='2_Page_16'></a>homosexuality in abhorrence. In Afghanistan homosexuality is more
+generally accepted, and Burton stated that &quot;each caravan is accompanied by
+a number of boys and lads almost in woman's attire, with kohled eyes and
+rouged cheeks, long tresses and hennaed fingers and toes, riding
+luxuriously in camel paniers.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>If we turn to the New World, we find that among the American Indians, from
+the Eskimo of Alaska downward to Brazil and still farther south,
+homosexual customs have been very frequently observed. Sometimes they are
+regarded by the tribe with honor, sometimes with indifference, sometimes
+with contempt; but they appear to be always tolerated. Although there are
+local differences, these customs, on the whole, seem to have much in
+common. The best early description which I have been able to find is by
+Langsdorff<a name='2_FNanchor_28'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_28'><sup>[28]</sup></a> and concerns the Aleuts of Oonalashka in Alaska: &quot;Boys, if
+they happen to be very handsome,&quot; he says, &quot;are often brought up entirely
+in the manner of girls, and instructed in the arts women use to please
+men; their beards are carefully plucked out as soon as they begin to
+appear, and their chins tattooed like those of women; they wear ornaments
+of glass beads upon their legs and arms, bind and cut their hair in the
+same manner as the women, and supply their place with the men as
+concubines. This shocking, unnatural, and immoral practice has obtained
+here even from the remotest times; nor have any measures hitherto been
+taken to repress and restrain it; such men are known under the name of
+<i>schopans</i>.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Among the Konyagas Langsdorff found the custom much more common than among
+the Aleuts; he remarks that, although the mothers brought up some of their
+children in this way, they seemed very fond of their offspring. Lisiansky,
+at about the same period, tells us that: &quot;Of all the customs of these
+islanders, the most disgusting is that of men, called <i>schoopans</i>, living
+with men, and supplying the place of women. These are brought up from
+their infancy with females, and taught all the feminine arts. They even
+assume the manner and dress of the <a name='2_Page_17'></a>women so nearly that a stranger would
+naturally take them for what they are not. This odious practice was
+formerly so prevalent that the residence of one of these monsters in a
+house was considered as fortunate; it is, however, daily losing
+ground.&quot;<a name='2_FNanchor_29'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_29'><sup>[29]</sup></a> He mentions a case in which a priest had nearly married two
+males, when an interpreter chanced to come in and was able to inform him
+what he was doing.</p>
+
+<p>The practice has, however, apparently continued to be fairly common among
+the Alaska Eskimos down to recent times. Thus Dr. Engelmann mentioned to
+me that he was informed by those who had lived in Alaska, especially near
+Point Barrow, that as many as 5 such individuals (regarded by uninstructed
+strangers as &quot;hermaphrodites&quot;) might be found in a single comparatively
+small community. It is stated by Davydoff, as quoted by Holmberg,<a name='2_FNanchor_30'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_30'><sup>[30]</sup></a> that
+the boy is selected to be a <i>schopan</i> because he is girl-like. This is a
+point of some interest as it indicates that the schopan is not effeminated
+solely by suggestion and association, but is probably feminine by inborn
+constitution.</p>
+
+<p>In Louisiana, Florida, Yucatan, etc., somewhat similar customs exist or
+have existed. In Brazil men are to be found dressed as women and solely
+occupying themselves with feminine occupations; they are not very highly
+regarded.<a name='2_FNanchor_31'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_31'><sup>[31]</sup></a> They are called <i>cudinas</i>: <i>i.e.</i>, circumcized. Among the
+Pueblo Indians of New Mexico these individuals are called <i>mujerados</i>
+(supposed to be a corruption of <i>mujeriego</i>) and are the chief passive
+agents in the homosexual ceremonies of these people. They are said to be
+intentionally effeminated in early life by much masturbation and by
+constant horse-riding.<a name='2_FNanchor_32'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_32'><sup>[32]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>Among all the tribes of the northwest United States sexual inverts may be
+found. The invert is called a <i>bot&eacute;</i> (&quot;not man, not woman&quot;) by the
+Montana, and a <i>burdash</i> (&quot;half-man, half-woman&quot;)<a name='2_Page_18'></a> by the Washington
+Indians. The <i>bot&eacute;</i> has been carefully studied by Dr. A. B. Holder.<a name='2_FNanchor_33'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_33'><sup>[33]</sup></a>
+Holder finds that the <i>bot&eacute;</i> wears woman's dress, and that his speech and
+manners are feminine. The dress and manners are assumed in childhood, but
+no sexual practices take place until puberty. These consist in the
+practice of <i>fellatio</i> by the <i>bot&eacute;</i>, who probably himself experiences the
+orgasm at the same time. The <i>bot&eacute;</i> is not a pederast, although pederasty
+occurs among these Indians. Holder examined <i>bot&eacute;</i> who was splendidly
+made, prepossessing, and in perfect health. With much reluctance he agreed
+to a careful examination. The sexual organs were quite normal, though
+perhaps not quite so large as his <i>physique</i> would suggest, but he had
+never had intercourse with a woman. On removing his clothes he pressed his
+thighs together, as a timid woman would, so as to conceal completely the
+sexual organs; Holder says that the thighs &quot;really, or to my fancy,&quot; had
+the feminine rotundity. He has heard a <i>bot&eacute;</i> &quot;<i>beg</i> a male Indian to
+submit to his caress,&quot; and he tells that &quot;one little fellow, while in the
+agency boarding-school, was found frequently surreptitiously wearing
+female attire. He was punished, but finally escaped from school and became
+a <i>bot&eacute;</i>, which vocation he has since followed.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>At Tahiti at the beginning of the nineteenth century, Turnbull<a name='2_FNanchor_34'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_34'><sup>[34]</sup></a> found
+that &quot;there are a set of men in this country whose open profession is of
+such abomination that the laudable delicacy of our language will not admit
+it to be mentioned. These are called by the natives <i>Mahoos</i>; they assume
+the dress, attitude, and manners of women, and affect all the fantastic
+oddities and coquetries of the vainest of females. They mostly associate
+with the women, who court their acquaintance. With the manners of the
+women they adopt their peculiar employments, making cloth, bonnets, and
+mats; and so completely are they unsexed that had they not been pointed
+out to me I should not have known them but as women. I add, with some
+satisfaction, that <a name='2_Page_19'></a>the encouragement of this abomination is almost solely
+confined to the chiefs.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Among the Sakalaves of Madagascar there are certain boys called <i>sekatra</i>,
+as described by Lasnet, who are apparently chosen from childhood on
+account of weak or delicate appearance and brought up as girls. They live
+like women and have intercourse with men, with or without sodomy, paying
+the men who please them.<a name='2_FNanchor_35'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_35'><sup>[35]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>Among the negro population of Zanzibar forms of homosexuality which are
+believed to be congenital (as well as acquired forms) are said to be
+fairly common. Their frequency is thought to be due to Arab influence. The
+male congenital inverts show from their earliest years no aptitude for
+men's occupations, but are attracted toward female occupations. As they
+grow older they wear women's clothes, dress their hair in women's fashion,
+and behave altogether like women. They associate only with women and with
+male prostitutes, and they obtain sexual satisfaction by passive pederasty
+or in ways simulating coitus. In appearance they resemble ordinary male
+prostitutes, who are common in Zanzibar, but it is noteworthy that the
+natives make a clear distinction between them and men prostitutes. The
+latter are looked down on with contempt, while the former, as being what
+they are &quot;by the will of God,&quot; are tolerated.<a name='2_FNanchor_36'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_36'><sup>[36]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>Homosexuality; occurs in various parts of Africa. Cases of <i>effeminatio</i>
+and passive sodomy have been reported from Unyamwezi and Uganda. Among the
+Bangala of the Upper Congo sodomy between men is very common, especially
+when they are away from home, in strange towns, or in fishing camps. If,
+however, a man had intercourse with a woman <i>per anum</i> he was at one time
+liable to be put to death.<a name='2_FNanchor_37'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_37'><sup>[37]</sup></a> <a name='2_Page_20'></a></p>
+
+<p>Among the Papuans in some parts of New Guinea, as already mentioned,
+homosexuality is said to be well recognized, and is resorted to for
+convenience as well, perhaps, as for Malthusian reasons.<a name='2_FNanchor_38'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_38'><sup>[38]</sup></a> But in the
+Rigo district of British New Guinea, where habitual sodomy is not
+practised, Dr. Seligmann, of the Cambridge Anthropological Expedition to
+Torres Straits, made some highly important observations on several men and
+women who clearly appeared to be cases of congenital sexual inversion with
+some degree of esthetic inversion and even some anatomical
+modification.<a name='2_FNanchor_39'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_39'><sup>[39]</sup></a> These people, it may be noted, belong to a primitive
+race, uncontaminated by contact with white races, and practically still in
+the Stone Age.</p>
+
+<p>Finally, among another allied primitive people, the Australians, it would
+appear that homosexuality has long been well established in tribal
+customs. Among the natives of Kimberley, Western Australia (who are by no
+means of low type, quick and intelligent, with special aptitudes for
+learning languages and music), if a wife is not obtainable for a young man
+he is presented with a boy-wife between the ages of 5 and 10 (the age when
+a boy receives his masculine initiation). The exact nature of the
+relations between the boy-wife and his protector are doubtful; they
+certainly have connection, but the natives repudiate with horror and
+disgust the idea of sodomy.<a name='2_FNanchor_40'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_40'><sup>[40]</sup></a> <a name='2_Page_21'></a></p>
+
+<p>Further light is thrown on homosexuality in Australia by the supposition
+of Spencer and Gillen that the <i>mika</i> operation (urethral subincision), an
+artificial hypospadias, is for the purpose of homosexual intercourse.
+Klaatsch has discussed the homosexual origin of the <i>mika</i> operation on
+the basis of information he received from missionaries at Niol-Niol, on
+the northwest coast. The subincised man acts as a female to the as yet
+unoperated boys, who perform coitus in the incised opening. Both informed
+Klaatsch in 1906 that at Boulia in Queensland the operated men are said to
+&quot;possess a vulva.&quot;<a name='2_FNanchor_41'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_41'><sup>[41]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>These various accounts are of considerable interest, though for the most
+part their precise significance remains doubtful. Some of them,
+however,&mdash;such as Holder's description of the <i>bot&eacute;</i>, Baumann's account of
+homosexual phenomena in Zanzibar, and especially Seligmann's observations
+in British New Guinea,&mdash;indicate not only the presence of esthetic
+inversion but of true congenital sexual inversion. The extent of the
+evidence will doubtless be greatly enlarged as the number of competent
+observers increases, and crucial points are no longer so frequently
+overlooked.</p>
+
+<p>On the whole, the evidence shows that among lower races homosexual
+practices are regarded with considerable indifference, and the real
+invert, if he exists among them, as doubtless he does exist, generally
+passes unperceived or joins some sacred caste which sanctifies his
+exclusively homosexual inclinations.</p>
+
+<p>Even in Europe today a considerable lack of repugnance to homosexual
+practices may be found among the lower classes. In this matter, as
+folklore shows in so many other matters, the uncultured man of
+civilization is linked to the savage. In England, I am told, the soldier
+often has little or no objection to prostitute himself to the &quot;swell&quot; who
+pays him, although for pleasure he prefers to go to women; and Hyde Park
+is spoken of as a center of male prostitution.<a name='2_Page_22'></a></p>
+
+<div class='blkquot'><p>&quot;Among the working masses of England and Scotland,&quot; Q. writes,
+ &quot;'comradeship' is well marked, though not (as in Italy) very
+ conscious of itself. Friends often kiss each other, though this
+ habit seems to vary a good deal in different sections and
+ coteries. Men commonly sleep together, whether comrades or not,
+ and so easily get familiar. Occasionally, but not so very often,
+ this relation delays for a time, or even indefinitely, actual
+ marriage, and in some instances is highly passionate and
+ romantic. There is a good deal of grossness, no doubt, here and
+ there in this direction among the masses; but there are no male
+ prostitutes (that I am aware of) whose regular clients are manual
+ workers. This kind of prostitution in London is common enough,
+ but I have only a slight personal knowledge of it. Many youths
+ are 'kept' handsomely in apartments by wealthy men, and they are,
+ of course, not always inaccessible to others. Many keep
+ themselves in lodgings by this means, and others eke out scanty
+ wages by the same device: just like women, in fact. Choirboys
+ reinforce the ranks to a considerable extent, and private
+ soldiers to a large extent. Some of the barracks (notably
+ Knightsbridge) are great centres. On summer evenings Hyde Park
+ and the neighborhood of Albert Gate is full of guardsmen and
+ others plying a lively trade, and with little disguise, in
+ uniform or out. In these cases it sometimes only amounts to a
+ chat on a retired seat or a drink at a bar; sometimes recourse is
+ had to a room in some known lodging-house, or to one or two
+ hotels which lend themselves to this kind of business. In any
+ case it means a covetable addition to Tommy Atkins's
+ pocket-money.&quot; And Mr. Raffalovich, speaking of London, remarks:
+ &quot;The number of soldiers who prostitute themselves is greater than
+ we are willing to believe. It is no exaggeration to say that in
+ certain regiments the presumption is in favor of the venality of
+ the majority of the men.&quot; It is worth noting that there is a
+ perfect understanding in this matter between soldiers and the
+ police, who may always be relied upon by the former for
+ assistance and advice. I am indebted to my correspondent &quot;Z&quot; for
+ the following notes: &quot;Soldiers are no less sought after in France
+ than in England or in Germany, and special houses exist for
+ military prostitution both in Paris and the garrison-towns. Many
+ facts known about the French army go to prove that these habits
+ have been contracted in Algeria, and have spread to a formidable
+ extent through whole regiments. The facts related by Ulrichs
+ about the French foreign legion, on the testimony of a credible
+ witness who had been a pathic in his regiment, deserve attention
+ (<i>Ara Spei</i>, p. 20; <i>Memnon</i>, p. 27). This man, who was a German,
+ told Ulrichs that the Spanish, French, and Italian soldiers were
+ the lovers, the Swiss and German their beloved (see also General
+ Brossier's Report, quoted by Burton, <i>Arabian Nights</i>, vol. x, p.
+ 251). In Lucien Descaves's military novel, <i>Sous Offs</i> (Paris,
+ Tresse et Stock,<a name='2_Page_23'></a> 1890), some details are given regarding
+ establishments for male prostitution. See pages 322, 412, and 417
+ for description of the drinking-shop called 'Aux Amis de
+ l'Arm&eacute;e,' where a few maids were kept for show, and also of its
+ frequenters, including, in particular, the Adjutant Lapr&eacute;votte.
+ Ulrichs reports that in the Austrian army lectures on homosexual
+ vices are regularly given to cadets and conscripts (<i>Memnon</i>, p.
+ 26). A soldier who had left the army told a friend of mine that
+ he and many of his comrades had taken to homosexual indulgences
+ when abroad on foreign service in a lonely station. He kept the
+ practice up in England 'because the women of his class were so
+ unattractive.' The captain of an English man-of-war said that he
+ was always glad to send his men on shore after a long cruise at
+ sea, never feeling sure how far they might not all go if left
+ without women for a certain space of time.&quot; I may add that A.
+ Hamon (<i>La France Sociale et Politique</i>, 1891, pp. 653-55; also
+ in his <i>Psychologie du Militaire Professional</i>, chapter x) gives
+ details as to the prevalence of homosexuality in the French army,
+ especially in Algeria; he regards it as extremely common,
+ although the majority are free. A fragment of a letter by General
+ Lamorici&egrave;re (speaking of Marshal Changarnier) is quoted: <i>En
+ Afrique nous en &eacute;tions tous, mais lui en est rest&eacute; ici</i>. </p></div>
+
+<p>This primitive indifference is doubtless also a factor in the prevalence
+of homosexuality among criminals, although, here, it must be remembered,
+two other factors (congenital abnormality and the isolation of
+imprisonment) have to be considered. In Russia, Tarnowsky observes that
+all pederasts are agreed that the common people are tolerably indifferent
+to their sexual advances, which they call &quot;gentlemen's games.&quot; A
+correspondent remarks on &quot;the fact, patent to all observers, that simple
+folk not infrequently display no greater disgust for the abnormalities of
+sexual appetite than they do for its normal manifestations.&quot;<a name='2_FNanchor_42'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_42'><sup>[42]</sup></a> He knows
+of many cases in which men of lower class were flattered and pleased by
+the attentions of men of higher class, although not themselves inverted.
+And from this point of view the following case, which he mentions, is very
+instructive:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class='blkquot'><p>A pervert whom I can trust told me that he had made advances to
+ upward of one hundred men in the course of the last fourteen
+ years, and <a name='2_Page_24'></a>that he had only once met with a refusal (in which
+ case the man later on offered himself spontaneously) and only
+ once with an attempt to extort money. Permanent relations of
+ friendship sprang up in most instances. He admitted that he
+ looked after these persons and helped them with his social
+ influence and a certain amount of pecuniary support&mdash;setting one
+ up in business, giving another something to marry on, and finding
+ places for others. </p></div>
+
+<p>Among the peasantry in Switzerland, I am informed, homosexual
+relationships are not uncommon before marriage, and such relationships are
+lightly spoken of as &quot;Dummheiten&quot;. No doubt, similar traits might be found
+in the peasantry of other parts of Europe.</p>
+
+<p>What may be regarded as true sexual inversion can be traced in Europe from
+the beginning of the Christian era (though we can scarcely demonstrate the
+congenital element) especially among two classes&mdash;men of exceptional
+ability and criminals; and also, it may be added, among those neurotic and
+degenerate individuals who may be said to lie between these two classes,
+and on or over the borders of both. Homosexuality, mingled with various
+other sexual abnormalities and excesses, seems to have flourished in Rome
+during the empire, and is well exemplified in the persons of many of the
+emperors.<a name='2_FNanchor_43'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_43'><sup>[43]</sup></a> Julius C&aelig;sar, Augustus, Tiberius, Caligula, Claudius, Nero,
+Galba, Titus, Domitian, Nerva, Trajan, Hadrian, Commodus, and
+Heliogabalus&mdash;many of them men of great ability and, from a Roman
+standpoint, great moral worth&mdash;are all charged, on more or less solid
+evidence, with homosexual practices. In Julius C&aelig;sar&mdash;&quot;the husband of all
+women and the wife of all men&quot; as he was satirically termed&mdash;excess of
+sexual activity seems to have accompanied, as is sometimes seen, an excess
+of intellectual activity. He was first accused of homosexual practices
+after a long stay in Bithynia with King Nikomedes, and the charge was
+<a name='2_Page_25'></a>very often renewed. C&aelig;sar was proud of his physical beauty, and, like
+some modern inverts, he was accustomed carefully to shave and epilate his
+body to preserve the smoothness of the skin. Hadrian's love for his
+beautiful slave Antino&uuml;s is well known; the love seems to have been deep
+and mutual, and Antino&uuml;s has become immortalized, partly by the romance of
+his obscure death and partly by the new and strangely beautiful type which
+he has given to sculpture.<a name='2_FNanchor_44'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_44'><sup>[44]</sup></a> Heliogabalus, &quot;the most homosexual of all
+the company,&quot; as he has been termed, seems to have been a true sexual
+invert, of feminine type; he dressed as a woman and was devoted to the men
+he loved.<a name='2_FNanchor_45'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_45'><sup>[45]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>Homosexual practices everywhere flourish and abound in prisons. There is
+abundant evidence on this point. I will only bring forward the evidence of
+Dr. Wey, formerly physician to the Elmira Reformatory, New York.
+&quot;Sexuality&quot; (he wrote in a private letter) &quot;is one of the most troublesome
+elements with which we have to contend. I have no data as to the number of
+prisoners here who are sexually perverse. In my pessimistic moments I
+should feel like saying that all were; but probably 80 per cent, would be
+a fair estimate.&quot; And, referring to the sexual influence which some men
+have over others, he remarks that &quot;there are many men with features
+suggestive of femininity that attract others to them in a way that reminds
+me of a bitch in heat followed by a pack of dogs.&quot;<a name='2_FNanchor_46'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_46'><sup>[46]</sup></a> In Sing Sing prison
+of<a name='2_Page_26'></a> New York, 20 per cent, of the prisoners are said to be actively
+homosexual and a large number of the rest passively homosexual. These
+prison relationships are not always of a brutal character, McMurtrie
+states, the attraction sometimes being more spiritual than physical.<a name='2_FNanchor_47'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_47'><sup>[47]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>Prison life develops and fosters the homosexual tendency of criminals; but
+there can be little doubt that that tendency, or else a tendency to sexual
+indifference or bisexuality, is a radical character of a very large number
+of criminals. We may also find it to a considerable extent among tramps,
+an allied class of undoubted degenerates, who, save for brief seasons, are
+less familiar with prison life. I am able to bring forward interesting
+evidence on this point by an acute observer who lived much among tramps in
+various countries, and largely devoted himself to the study of them.<a name='2_FNanchor_48'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_48'><sup>[48]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>The fact that homosexuality is especially common among men of exceptional
+intellect was long since noted by Dante:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<span>&quot;In somma sappi, che tutti fur cherci<br /></span>
+<span>E litterati grandi, et di gran fama<br /></span>
+<span>D'un medismo peccato al mondo lerci.&quot;<a name='2_FNanchor_49'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_49'><sup>[49]</sup></a><br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>It has often been noted since and remains a remarkable fact.</p>
+
+<div class='blkquot'><p>There cannot be the slightest doubt that intellectual and
+ artistic abilities of the highest order have frequently been
+ associated with a congenitally inverted sexual temperament. There
+ has been a tendency among inverts themselves to discover their
+ own temperament in many distinguished persons on evidence of the
+ most slender character. But it remains a demonstrable fact that
+ numerous highly distinguished persons, of the past and the
+ present, in various countries, have been inverts. I may here
+ refer to my own observations on this point in the preface.
+ Mantegazza (<i>Gli Amori degli Uomini</i>) remarks that in his own
+ restricted circle he is acquainted with &quot;a French publicist, a
+ German poet, an Italian statesman, and a Spanish jurist, all men
+ of exquisite taste and highly cultivated mind,&quot; who are sexually
+ inverted. Krafft-Ebing, in <a name='2_Page_27'></a>the preface to his <i>Psychopathia
+ Sexualis</i>, referring to the &quot;numberless&quot; communications he has
+ received from these &quot;step-children of nature,&quot; remarks that &quot;the
+ majority of the writers are men of high intellectual and social
+ position, and often possess very keen emotions.&quot; Raffalovich
+ (<i>Uranisme</i>, p. 197) names among distinguished inverts, Alexander
+ the Great, Epaminondas, Virgil, the great Cond&eacute;, Prince Eug&egrave;ne,
+ etc. (The question of Virgil's inversion is discussed in the
+ <i>Revista di Filologia</i>, 1890, fas. 7-9, but I have not been able
+ to see this review.) Moll, in his <i>Ber&uuml;hmte Homosexuelle</i> (1910,
+ in the series of <i>Grenzfragen des Nerven- und Seelenlebens</i>)
+ discusses the homosexuality of a number of eminent persons, for
+ the most part with his usual caution and sagacity; speaking of
+ the alleged homosexuality of Wagner he remarks, with entire
+ truth, that &quot;the method of arguing the existence of homosexuality
+ from the presence of feminine traits must be decisively
+ rejected.&quot; Hirschfeld has more recently included in his great
+ work <i>Die Homosexualit&auml;t</i> (1913, pp. 650-674) two lists, ancient
+ and modern, of alleged inverts among the distinguished persons of
+ history, briefly stating the nature of the evidence in each case.
+ They amount to nearly 300. Not all of them, however, can be
+ properly described as distinguished. Thus we end in the list 43
+ English names; of these at least half a dozen were noblemen who
+ were concerned in homosexual prosecutions, but were of no
+ intellectual distinction. Others, again, are of undoubted
+ eminence, but there is no good reason to regard them as
+ homosexual; this is the case, for instance, as regards Swift, who
+ may have been mentally abnormal, but appears to have been
+ heterosexual rather than homosexual; Fletcher, of whom we know
+ nothing definite in this respect, is also included, as well as
+ Tennyson, whose youthful sentimental friendship for Arthur Hallam
+ is exactly comparable to that of Montaigne for Etienne de la
+ Bo&euml;tie, yet Montaigne is not included in the list. It may be
+ added, however, that while some of the English names in the list
+ are thus extremely doubtful, it would have been possible to add
+ some others who were without doubt inverts. </p></div>
+
+<p>It has not, I think, been noted&mdash;largely because the evidence was
+insufficiently clear&mdash;that among moral leaders, and persons with strong
+ethical instincts, there is a tendency toward the more elevated forms of
+homosexual feeling. This may be traced, not only in some of the great
+moral teachers of old, but also in men and women of our own day. It is
+fairly evident why this should be so. Just as the repressed love of a
+woman or a man has, in normally constituted persons, frequently furnished
+the motive power for an enlarged philanthropic activity, <a name='2_Page_28'></a>so the person
+who sees his own sex also bathed in sexual glamour, brings to his work of
+human service an ardor wholly unknown to the normally constituted
+individual; morality to him has become one with love.<a name='2_FNanchor_50'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_50'><sup>[50]</sup></a> I am not
+prepared here to insist on this point, but no one, I think, who studies
+sympathetically the histories and experiences of great moral leaders can
+fail in many cases to note the presence of this feeling, more or less
+finely sublimated from any gross physical manifestation.</p>
+
+<p>If it is probable that in moral movements persons of homosexual
+temperament have sometimes become prominent, it is undoubtedly true,
+beyond possibility of doubt, that they have been prominent in religion.
+Many years ago (in 1885) the ethnologist, Elie Reclus, in his charming
+book, <i>Les Primitifs</i>,<a name='2_FNanchor_51'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_51'><sup>[51]</sup></a> setting forth the phenomena of homosexuality
+among the Eskimo Innuit tribe, clearly insisted that from time immemorial
+there has been a connection between the invert and the priest, and showed
+how well this connection is illustrated by the Eskimo <i>schupans</i>. Much
+more recently, in his elaborate study of the priest, Horneffer discusses
+the feminine traits of priests and shows that, among the most various
+peoples, persons of sexually abnormal and especially homosexual
+temperament have assumed the functions of priesthood. To the popular eye
+the unnatural is the supernatural, and the abnormal has appeared to be
+specially close to the secret Power of the World. Abnormal <a name='2_Page_29'></a>persons are
+themselves of the same opinion and regard themselves as divine. As
+Horneffer points out, they often really possess special aptitude.<a name='2_FNanchor_52'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_52'><sup>[52]</sup></a>
+Karsch in his <i>Gleichgeschlechtliche Leben der Naturv&ouml;lker</i> (1911) has
+brought out the high religious as well as social significance of castes of
+cross-dressed and often homosexual persons among primitive peoples. At the
+same time Edward Carpenter in his remarkable book, <i>Intermediate Types
+among Primitive Folk</i> (1914), has shown with much insight how it comes
+about that there is an organic connection between the homosexual
+temperament and unusual psychic or divinatory powers. Homosexual men were
+non-warlike and homosexual women non-domestic, so that their energies
+sought different outlets from those of ordinary men and women; they became
+the initiators of new activities. Thus it is that from among them would in
+some degree issue not only inventors and craftsmen and teachers, but
+sorcerers and diviners, medicine-men and wizards, prophets and priests.
+Such persons would be especially impelled to thought, because they would
+realize that they were different from other people; treated with reverence
+by some and with contempt by others, they would be compelled to face the
+problems of their own nature and, indirectly, the problems of the world
+generally. Moreover, Carpenter points out, persons in whom the masculine
+and feminine temperaments were combined would in many cases be persons of
+intuition and complex mind beyond their fellows, and so able to exercise
+divination and prophecy in a very real and natural sense.<a name='2_FNanchor_53'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_53'><sup>[53]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>This aptitude of the invert for primitive religion, for sorcery and
+divination, would have its reaction on popular feeling, more especially
+when magic and the primitive forms of religion began to fall into
+disrepute. The invert would be regarded as the sorcerer of a false and
+evil religion and be submerged in the <a name='2_Page_30'></a>same ignominy. This point has been
+emphasized by Westermarck in the instructive chapter on homosexuality in
+his great work on Moral Ideas.<a name='2_FNanchor_54'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_54'><sup>[54]</sup></a> He points out the significance of the
+fact, at the first glance apparently inexplicable, that homosexuality in
+the general opinion of medieval Christianity was constantly associated,
+even confounded, with heresy, as we see significantly illustrated by the
+fact that in France and England the popular designation for homosexuality
+is derived from the Bulgarian heretics. It was, Westermarck believes,
+chiefly as a heresy and out of religious zeal that homosexuality was so
+violently reprobated and so ferociously punished.</p>
+
+<p>In modern Europe we find the strongest evidence of the presence of what
+may fairly be called true sexual inversion when we investigate the men of
+the Renaissance. The intellectual independence of those days and the
+influence of antiquity seem to have liberated and fully developed the
+impulses of those abnormal individuals who would otherwise have found no
+clear expression, and passed unnoticed.<a name='2_FNanchor_55'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_55'><sup>[55]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>Muret, the Humanist, may perhaps be regarded as a typical example of the
+nature and fate of the superior invert of the Renaissance. Born in 1526 at
+Muret (Limousin), of poor but noble family, he was of independent,
+somewhat capricious character, unable to endure professors, and
+consequently he was mainly his own teacher, though he often sought advice
+from Jules-C&eacute;sar Scaliger. Muret was universally admired in his day for
+his learning and his eloquence, and is still regarded not only as a great
+Latinist and a fine writer, but as a notable man, of high intelligence,
+and remarkable, moreover, for courtesy in polemics in an age when that
+quality was not too common. His portrait shows a somewhat coarse and
+rustic but intelligent face. He conquered honor and respect before he died
+in 1585, at the age of 59. In early life Muret wrote wanton erotic poems
+to women <a name='2_Page_31'></a>which seem based on personal experience. But in 1553 we find him
+imprisoned in the Ch&acirc;telet for sodomy and in danger of his life, so that
+he thought of starving himself to death. Friends, however, obtained his
+release and he settled in Toulouse. But the very next year he was burnt in
+effigy in Toulouse, as a Huguenot and sodomist, this being the result of a
+judicial sentence which had caused him to flee from the city and from
+France. Four years later he had to flee from Padua owing to a similar
+accusation. He had many friends but none of them protested against the
+charge, though they aided him to escape from the penalty. It is very
+doubtful whether he was a Huguenot, and whenever in his works he refers to
+pederasty it is with strong disapproval. But his writings reveal
+passionate friendship for men, and he seems to have expended little energy
+in combating a charge which, if false, was a shameful injustice to him. It
+was after fleeing into Italy and falling ill of a fever from fatigue and
+exposure that Muret is said to have made the famous retort (to the
+physician by his bedside who had said: &quot;Faciamus experimentum in anima
+vili&quot;): &quot;Vilem animam appellas pro qua Christus non dedignatus est
+mori.&quot;<a name='2_FNanchor_56'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_56'><sup>[56]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>A greater Humanist than Muret, Erasmus himself, seems as a young man, when
+in the Augustinian monastery of Stein, to have had a homosexual attraction
+to another Brother (afterward Prior) to whom he addressed many
+passionately affectionate letters; his affection seems, however, to have
+been unrequited.<a name='2_FNanchor_57'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_57'><sup>[57]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>As the Renaissance developed, homosexuality seems to become more prominent
+among distinguished persons. Poliziano was accused of pederasty. Aretino
+was a pederast, as Pope Julius II seems also to have been. Ariosto wrote
+in his satires, no doubt too extremely:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<span>&quot;Senza quel vizio son pochi umanisti.&quot;<a name='2_FNanchor_58'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_58'><sup>[58]</sup></a><br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Tasso had a homosexual strain in his nature, but he was of <a name='2_Page_32'></a>weak and
+feminine constitution, sensitively emotional and physically frail.<a name='2_FNanchor_59'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_59'><sup>[59]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>It is, however, among artists, at that time and later, that homosexuality
+may most notably be traced. Leonardo da Vinci, whose ideals as revealed in
+his work are so strangely bisexual, lay under homosexual suspicion in his
+youth. In 1476, when he was 24 years of age, charges were made against him
+before the Florentine officials for the control of public morality, and
+were repeated, though they do not appear to have been substantiated. There
+is, however, some ground for supposing that Leonardo was imprisoned in his
+youth.<a name='2_FNanchor_60'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_60'><sup>[60]</sup></a> Throughout life he loved to surround himself with beautiful
+youths and his pupils were more remarkable for their attractive appearance
+than for their skill; to one at least of them he was strongly attached,
+while there is no record of any attachment to a woman. Freud, who has
+studied Leonardo with his usual subtlety, considers that his temperament
+was marked by &quot;ideal homosexuality.&quot;<a name='2_FNanchor_61'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_61'><sup>[61]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>Michelangelo, one of the very chief artists of the Renaissance period, we
+cannot now doubt, was sexually inverted. The evidence furnished by his own
+letters and poems, as well as the researches of numerous recent
+workers,&mdash;Parlagreco, Scheffler, J. A. Symonds, etc.,&mdash;may be said to have
+placed this beyond question.<a name='2_FNanchor_62'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_62'><sup>[62]</sup></a> He belonged to a family of 5 brothers, 4
+of whom never married, and so far as is known left no offspring; the fifth
+only left 1 male heir. His biographer describes Michelangelo as &quot;a man of
+peculiar, not altogether healthy, nervous temperament.&quot; He was indifferent
+to women; only in one case, indeed, during his long life is there evidence
+even of friendship with a woman, while he was very sensitive to the beauty
+of men, <a name='2_Page_33'></a>and his friendships were very tender and enthusiastic. At the
+same time there is no reason to suppose that he formed any physically
+passionate relationships with men, and even his enemies seldom or never
+made this accusation against him. We may probably accept the estimate of
+his character given by Symonds:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class='blkquot'><p>Michelangelo Buonarotti was one of those exceptional, but not
+ uncommon men who are born with sensibilities abnormally deflected
+ from the ordinary channel. He showed no partiality for women, and
+ a notable enthusiasm for the beauty of young men.... He was a man
+ of physically frigid temperament, extremely sensitive to beauty
+ of the male type, who habitually philosophized his emotions, and
+ contemplated the living objects of his admiration as amiable, not
+ only for their personal qualities, but also for their esthetical
+ attractiveness.<a name='2_FNanchor_63'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_63'><sup>[63]</sup></a> </p></div>
+
+<p>A temperament of this kind seems to have had no significance for the men
+of those days; they were blind to all homosexual emotion which had no
+result in sodomy. Plato found such attraction a subject for sentimental
+metaphysics, but it was not until nearly our own time that it again became
+a subject of interest and study. Yet it undoubtedly had profound influence
+on Michelangelo's art, impelling him to find every kind of human beauty in
+the male form, and only a grave dignity or tenderness, divorced from every
+quality that is sexually desirable, in the female form. This deeply rooted
+abnormality is at once the key to the melancholy of Michelangelo and to
+the mystery of his art.</p>
+
+<p>Michelangelo's contemporary, the painter Bazzi (1477-1549), seems also to
+have been radically inverted, and to this fact he owed his nickname
+Sodoma. As, however, he was married and had children, it may be that he
+was, as we should now say, of bisexual temperament. He was a great artist
+who has been dealt with unjustly, partly, perhaps, because of the
+prejudice of Vasari,&mdash;whose admiration for Michelangelo amounted to
+worship, but who is contemptuous toward Sodoma and grudging of
+praise,&mdash;partly because his work is little known out of Italy and <a name='2_Page_34'></a>not
+very easy of access there. Reckless, unbalanced, and eccentric in his
+life, Sodoma revealed in his painting a peculiar feminine softness and
+warmth&mdash;which indeed we seem to see also in his portrait of himself at
+Monte Oliveto Maggiore&mdash;and a very marked and tender feeling for
+masculine, but scarcely virile, beauty.<a name='2_FNanchor_64'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_64'><sup>[64]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>Cellini was probably homosexual. He was imprisoned on a charge of
+unnatural vice and is himself suspiciously silent in his autobiography
+concerning this imprisonment.<a name='2_FNanchor_65'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_65'><sup>[65]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>In the seventeenth century another notable sculptor who has been termed
+the Flemish Cellini, J&eacute;r&ocirc;me Duquesnoy (whose still more distinguished
+brother Fran&ccedil;ois executed the Manneken Pis in Brussels), was an invert;
+having finally been accused of sexual relations with a youth in a chapel
+of the Ghent Cathedral, where he was executing a monument for the bishop,
+he was strangled and burned, notwithstanding that much influence,
+including that of the bishop, was brought to bear in his behalf.<a name='2_FNanchor_66'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_66'><sup>[66]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>In more recent times Winkelmann, who was the initiator of a new Greek
+Renaissance and of the modern appreciation of ancient art, lies under what
+seems to be a well-grounded suspicion of sexual inversion. His letters to
+male friends are full of the most passionate expressions of love. His
+violent death also appears to have been due to a love-adventure with a
+man. The murderer was a cook, a wholly uncultivated man, a criminal who
+had already been condemned to death, and shortly before murdering
+Winkelmann for the sake of plunder he was found <a name='2_Page_35'></a>to be on very intimate
+terms with him.<a name='2_FNanchor_67'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_67'><sup>[67]</sup></a> It is noteworthy that sexual inversion should so often
+be found associated with the study of antiquity. It must not, however, be
+too hastily concluded that this is due to suggestion and that to abolish
+the study of Greek literature and art would be largely to abolish sexual
+inversion. What has really occurred in those recent cases that may be
+studied, and therefore without doubt in the older cases, is that the
+subject of congenital sexual inversion is attracted to the study of Greek
+antiquity because he finds there the explanation and the apotheosis of his
+own obscure impulses. Undoubtedly that study tends to develop these
+impulses.</p>
+
+<p>While it is peculiarly easy to name men of distinguished ability who,
+either certainly or in all probability, have been affected by homosexual
+tendencies, they are not isolated manifestations. They spring out of an
+element of diffused homosexuality which is at least as marked in
+civilization as it is in savagery. It is easy to find illustrations in
+every country. Here it may suffice to refer to France, Germany, and
+England.</p>
+
+<p>In France in the thirteenth century the Church was so impressed by the
+prevalence of homosexuality that it reasserted the death penalty for
+sodomy at the Councils of Paris (1212) and Rouen (1214), while we are told
+that even by rejecting a woman's advances (as illustrated in Marie de
+France's <i>Lai de<a name='2_Page_36'></a> Lanval</i>) a man fell under suspicion as a sodomist, which
+was also held to involve heresy.<a name='2_FNanchor_68'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_68'><sup>[68]</sup></a> At the end of this century (about
+1294) Alain de Lille was impelled to write a book, <i>De Planctu Natur&aelig;</i>, in
+order to call attention to the prevalence of homosexual feeling; he also
+associated the neglect of women with sodomy. &quot;Man is made woman,&quot; he
+writes; &quot;he blackens the honor of his sex, the craft of magic Venus makes
+him of double gender&quot;; nobly beautiful youths have &quot;turned their hammers
+of love to the office of anvils,&quot; and &quot;many kisses lie untouched on maiden
+lips.&quot; The result is that &quot;the natural anvils,&quot; that is to say the
+neglected maidens, &quot;bewail the absence of their hammers and are seen sadly
+to demand them.&quot; Alain de Lille makes himself the voice of this
+demand.<a name='2_FNanchor_69'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_69'><sup>[69]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>A few years later, at the beginning of the fourteenth century, sodomy was
+still regarded as very prevalent. At that time it was especially
+associated with the Templars who, it has been supposed, brought it from
+the East. Such a supposition, however, is not required to account for the
+existence of homosexuality in France. Nor is it necessary, at a somewhat
+later period, to invoke, as is frequently done, the Italian origin of
+Catherine de Medici, in order to explain the prevalence of homosexual
+practices at her court.</p>
+
+<p>Notwithstanding its prevalence, sodomy was still severely punished from
+time to time. Thus in 1586, Dadon, who had formerly been Rector of the
+University of Paris, was hanged and then burned for injuring a child
+through sodomy.<a name='2_FNanchor_70'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_70'><sup>[70]</sup></a> In the seventeenth century, homosexuality continued,
+however, to flourish, and it is said that nearly all the numerous
+omissions made in the published editions of Tallement des Reaux's
+<i>Historiettes</i> refer to sodomy.<a name='2_FNanchor_71'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_71'><sup>[71]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>How prominent homosexuality was, in the early eighteenth century in
+France, we learn from the frequent references to it <a name='2_Page_37'></a>in the letters of
+Madame, the mother of the Regent, whose husband was himself effeminate and
+probably inverted.<a name='2_FNanchor_72'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_72'><sup>[72]</sup></a> For the later years of the century the evidence
+abounds on every hand. At this time the Bastille was performing a useful
+function, until recently overlooked by historians, as an <i>asile de suret&eacute;</i>
+for abnormal persons whom it was considered unsafe to leave at large.
+Inverts whose conduct became too offensive to be tolerated were frequently
+placed in the Bastille which, indeed &quot;abounded in homosexual subjects,&quot; to
+a greater extent than any other class of sexual perverts. Some of the
+affairs which led to the Bastille have a modern air. One such case on a
+large scale occurred in 1702, and reveals an organized system of
+homosexual prostitution; one of the persons involved in this affair was a
+handsome, well-made youth named Lebel, formerly a lackey, but passing
+himself off as a man of quality. Seduced at the age of 10 by a famous
+sodomist named Duplessis, he had since been at the disposition of a number
+of homosexual persons, including officers, priests, and marquises. Some of
+the persons involved in these affairs were burned alive; some cut their
+own throats; others again were set at liberty or transferred to the
+Bic&ecirc;tre.<a name='2_FNanchor_73'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_73'><sup>[73]</sup></a> During the latter part of the eighteenth century, also, we
+find another modern homosexual practice recognized in France; the
+rendezvous or center where homosexual persons could quietly meet each
+other.<a name='2_FNanchor_74'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_74'><sup>[74]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>Inversion has always been easy to trace in Germany. Ammianus Marcellinus
+bears witness to its prevalence among <a name='2_Page_38'></a>some German tribes in later Roman
+days.<a name='2_FNanchor_75'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_75'><sup>[75]</sup></a> In medi&aelig;val times, as Schultz points out, references to sodomy
+in Germany were far from uncommon. Various princes of the German Imperial
+house, and of other princely families in the Middle Ages, were noted for
+their intimate friendships. At a later date, attention has frequently been
+called to the extreme emotional warmth which has often marked German
+friendship, even when there has been no suspicion of any true homosexual
+relationship.<a name='2_FNanchor_76'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_76'><sup>[76]</sup></a> The eighteenth century, in the full enjoyment of that
+abandonment to sentiment initiated by Rousseau, proved peculiarly
+favorable to the expansion of the tendency to sentimental friendship. On
+this basis a really inverted tendency, when it existed, could easily come
+to the surface and find expression. We find this well illustrated in the
+poet Heinrich von Kleist who seems to have been of bisexual temperament,
+and his feelings for the girl he wished to marry were, indeed, much cooler
+than those for his friend. To this friend, Ernst von Pfu&euml;l (afterward
+Prussian war minister), Kleist wrote in 1805 at the age of 28: &quot;You bring
+the days of the Greeks back to me; I could sleep with you, dear youth, my
+whole soul so embraces you. When you used to bathe in the Lake of Thun I
+would gaze with the real feelings of a girl at your beautiful body. It
+would serve an artist to study from.&quot; There follows an enthusiastic
+account of his friend's beauty and of the Greek &quot;idea of the love of
+youths,&quot; and Kleist <a name='2_Page_39'></a>concludes: &quot;Go with me to Anspach, and let us enjoy
+the sweets of friendship.... I shall never marry; you must be wife and
+children to me.&quot;<a name='2_FNanchor_77'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_77'><sup>[77]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>In all social classes and in all fields of activity, Germany during the
+nineteenth century produced a long series of famous or notorious
+homosexual persons. At the one end we find people of the highest
+intellectual distinction, such as Alexander von Humboldt, whom N&auml;cke, a
+cautious investigator, stated that he had good ground for regarding as an
+invert.<a name='2_FNanchor_78'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_78'><sup>[78]</sup></a> At the other end we find prosperous commercial and
+manufacturing people who leave Germany to find solace in the free and
+congenial homosexual atmosphere of Capri; of these F. A. Krupp, the head of
+the famous Essen factory, may be regarded as the type.<a name='2_FNanchor_79'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_79'><sup>[79]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>In England (and the same is true today of the United States), although
+homosexuality has been less openly manifest and less thoroughly explored,
+it is doubtful whether it has been less prevalent than in Germany. At an
+early period, indeed, the evidence may even seem to show that it was more
+prevalent. In the Penitentials of the ninth and tenth centuries &quot;natural
+fornication and sodomy&quot; were frequently put together and the same penance
+assigned to both; it was recognized that priests and <a name='2_Page_40'></a>bishops, as well as
+laymen, might fall into this sin, though to the bishop nearly three times
+as much penance was assigned as to the layman. Among the Normans,
+everywhere, homosexuality was markedly prevalent; the spread of sodomy in
+France about the eleventh century is attributed to the Normans, and their
+coming seems to have rendered it at times almost fashionable, at all
+events at court. In England William Rufus was undoubtedly inverted, as
+later on were Edward II, James I, and, perhaps, though not in so
+conspicuous a degree, William III.<a name='2_FNanchor_80'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_80'><sup>[80]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>Ordericus Vitalis, who was himself half Norman and half English, says that
+the Normans had become very effeminate in his time, and that after the
+death of William the Conqueror sodomy was common both in England and
+Normandy. Guillaume de Nangis, in his chronicle for about 1120, speaking
+of the two sons of Henry and the company of young nobles who went down
+with them, in the <i>White Ship</i>, states that nearly all were considered to
+be sodomists, and Henry of Huntingdon, in his <i>History</i>, looked upon the
+loss of the <i>White Ship</i> as a judgment of heaven upon sodomy. Anselm, in
+writing to Archdeacon William to inform him concerning the recent Council
+at London (1102), gives advice as to how to deal with people who have
+committed the sin of sodomy, and instructs him not to be too harsh with
+those who have not realized its gravity, for hitherto &quot;this sin has been
+so public that hardly anyone has blushed for it, and many, therefore, have
+plunged into it without realizing its gravity.&quot;<a name='2_FNanchor_81'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_81'><sup>[81]</sup></a> So temperate a remark
+by a man of such unquestionably high character is more significant of the
+prevalence of homosexuality than much denunciation.</p>
+
+<p>In religious circles far from courts and cities, as we might expect,
+homosexuality was regarded with great horror, though <a name='2_Page_41'></a>even here we may
+discover evidence of its wide prevalence. Thus in the remarkable
+<i>Revelation</i> of the Monk of Evesham, written in English in 1196, we find
+that in the very worst part of Purgatory are confined an innumerable
+company of sodomists (including a wealthy, witty, and learned divine, a
+doctor of laws, personally known to the Monk), and whether these people
+would ever be delivered from Purgatory was a matter of doubt; of the
+salvation of no other sinners does the Monk of Evesham seem so dubious.</p>
+
+<p>Sodomy had always been an ecclesiastical offense. The Statute of 1533 (25
+Henry VIII, c. 6) made it a felony; and Pollock and Maitland consider that
+this &quot;affords an almost sufficient proof that the temporal courts had not
+punished it, and that no one had been put to death for it, for a very long
+time past.&quot;<a name='2_FNanchor_82'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_82'><sup>[82]</sup></a> The temporal law has never, however, proved very
+successful in repressing homosexuality. At this period the Renaissance
+movement was reaching England, and here as elsewhere it brought with it,
+if not an increase, at all events a rehabilitation and often an
+idealization of homosexuality.<a name='2_FNanchor_83'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_83'><sup>[83]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>An eminent humanist and notable pioneer in dramatic literature, Nicholas
+Udall, to whom is attributed <i>Ralph Roister Doister</i>, the first English
+comedy, stands out as unquestionably addicted to homosexual tastes,
+although he has left no literary evidence of this tendency. He was an
+early adherent of the Protestant movement, and when head-master of Eton he
+was noted for his love of inflicting corporal punishment on the boys.
+Tusser says he once received from Udall 53 stripes for &quot;fault but small or
+none at all.&quot; Here there was evidently a sexual sadistic impulse, for in
+1541 (the year of <i>Ralph Roister Doister</i>)<a name='2_Page_42'></a> Udall was charged with
+unnatural crime and confessed his guilt before the Privy Council. He was
+dismissed from the head-mastership and imprisoned, but only for a short
+time, &quot;and his reputation,&quot; his modern biographer states, &quot;was not
+permanently injured.&quot; He retained the vicarage of Braintree, and was much
+favored by Edward VI, who nominated him to a prebend of Windsor. Queen
+Mary was also favorable and he became head-master of Westminster
+School.<a name='2_FNanchor_84'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_84'><sup>[84]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>An Elizabethan lyrical poet of high quality, whose work has had the honor
+of being confused with Shakespeare's, Richard Barnfield, appears to have
+possessed the temperament, at least, of the invert. His poems to male
+friends are of so impassioned a character that they aroused the protests
+of a very tolerant age. Very little is known of Barnfield's life. Born in
+1574 he published his first poem, <i>The Affectionate Shepherd</i>, at the age
+of 20, while still at the University. It was issued anonymously, revealed
+much fresh poetic feeling and literary skill, and is addressed to a youth
+of whom the poet declares:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<span>&quot;If it be sin to love a lovely lad,<br /></span>
+<span>Oh then sin I.&quot;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>In his subsequent volume, <i>Cynthia</i> (1595), Barnfield disclaims any
+intention in the earlier poem beyond that of imitating Virgil's second
+eclogue. But the sonnets in this second volume are even more definitely
+homosexual than the earlier poem, though he goes on to tell how at last he
+found a lass whose beauty surpassed that</p>
+
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<span class='i6'>&quot;of the swain<br /></span>
+<span>Whom I never could obtain.&quot;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>After the age of 31 Barnfield wrote no more, but, being in easy
+circumstances, retired to his beautiful manor house and country estate in
+Shropshire, lived there for twenty years and died leaving a wife and
+son.<a name='2_FNanchor_85'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_85'><sup>[85]</sup></a> It seems probable that he was of bisexual temperament, <a name='2_Page_43'></a>and that,
+as not infrequently happens in such cases, the homosexual element
+developed early under the influence of a classical education and
+university associations, while the normal heterosexual element developed
+later and, as may happen in bisexual persons, was associated with the more
+commonplace and prosaic side of life. Barnfield was only a genuine poet on
+the homosexual side of his nature.</p>
+
+<p>Greater men of that age than Barnfield may be suspected of homosexual
+tendencies. Marlowe, whose most powerful drama, <i>Edward II</i>, is devoted to
+a picture of the relations between that king and his minions, is himself
+suspected of homosexuality. An ignorant informer brought certain charges
+of freethought and criminality against him, and further accused him of
+asserting that they are fools who love not boys. These charges have
+doubtless been colored by the vulgar channel through which they passed,
+but it seems absolutely impossible to regard them as the inventions of a
+mere gallows-bird such as this informer was.<a name='2_FNanchor_86'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_86'><sup>[86]</sup></a> Moreover, Marlowe's
+poetic work, while it shows him by no means insensitive to the beauty of
+women, also reveals a special and peculiar sensitiveness to masculine
+beauty. Marlowe clearly had a reckless delight in all things unlawful, and
+it seems probable that he possessed the bisexual temperament. Shakespeare
+has also been discussed from this point of view. All that can be said,
+however, is that he addressed a long series of sonnets to a youthful male
+friend. These sonnets are written in lover's language of a very tender and
+noble order. They do not appear to imply any relationship that the writer
+regarded as shameful or that would be so regarded by the world. Moreover,
+they seem <a name='2_Page_44'></a>to represent but a single episode in the life of a very
+sensitive, many-sided nature.<a name='2_FNanchor_87'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_87'><sup>[87]</sup></a> There is no other evidence in
+Shakespeare's work of homosexual instinct such as we may trace throughout
+Marlowe's, while there is abundant evidence of a constant preoccupation
+with women.</p>
+
+<p>While Shakespeare thus narrowly escapes inclusion in the list of
+distinguished inverts, there is much better ground for the inclusion of
+his great contemporary, Francis Bacon. Aubrey in his laboriously compiled
+<i>Short Lives</i>, in which he shows a friendly and admiring attitude toward
+Bacon, definitely states that he was a pederast. Aubrey was only a careful
+gleaner of frequently authentic gossip, but a similar statement is made by
+Sir Simonds D'Ewes in his <i>Autobiography</i>. D'Ewes, whose family belonged
+to the same part of Suffolk as Bacon's sprang from, was not friendly to
+Bacon, but that fact will not suffice to account for his statement. He was
+an upright and honorable man of scholarly habits, and, moreover, a trained
+lawyer, who had many opportunities of obtaining first-hand information,
+for he had lived in the Chancery office from childhood. He is very precise
+as to Bacon's homosexual practices with his own servants, both before and
+after his fall, and even gives the name of a &quot;very effeminate-faced youth&quot;
+who was his &quot;catamite and bedfellow&quot;; he states, further, that there had
+been some question of bringing Bacon to trial for sodomy. These
+allegations may be supported by a letter of Bacon's own mother (printed in
+Spedding's <i>Life of Bacon</i>), reproving him on account of what she had
+heard concerning his behavior with the young Welshmen in his service whom
+he made his bedfellows. It is notable that Bacon seems to have been
+specially attracted to Welshmen (one might even find evidence of this in
+the life of the Welshman, Henry VII), <a name='2_Page_45'></a>a people of vivacious temperament
+unlike his own; this is illustrated by his long and intimate friendship
+with the mercurial Sir Toby Mathew, his &quot;alter ego,&quot; a man of dissipated
+habits in early life, though we are not told that he was homosexual. Bacon
+had many friendships with men, but there is no evidence that he was ever
+in love or cherished any affectionate intimacy with a woman. Women play no
+part at all in his life. His marriage, which was childless, took place at
+the mature age of 46; it was effected in a business-like manner, and
+though he always treated his wife with formal consideration it is probable
+that he neglected her, and certain that he failed to secure her devotion;
+it is clear that toward the end of Bacon's life she formed a relationship
+with her gentleman usher, whom subsequently she married. Bacon's writings,
+it may be added, equally with his letters, show no evidence of love or
+attraction to women; in his <i>Essays</i> he is brief and judicial on the
+subject of Marriage, copious and eloquent on the subject of Friendship,
+while the essay on Beauty deals exclusively with masculine beauty.</p>
+
+<p>During the first half of the eighteenth century we have clear evidence
+that homosexuality flourished in London with the features which it
+presents today in all large cities everywhere. There was a generally known
+name, &quot;Mollies,&quot; applied to homosexual persons, evidently having reference
+to their frequently feminine characteristics; there were houses of private
+resort for them (&quot;Molly houses&quot;), there were special public places of
+rendezvous whither they went in search of adventure, exactly as there are
+today. A walk in Upper Moorfields was especially frequented by the
+homosexual about 1725. A detective employed by the police about that date
+gave evidence as follows at the Old Bailey; &quot;I takes a turn that way and
+leans over the wall. In a little time the prisoner passes by, and looks
+hard at me, and at a small distance from me stands up against the wall as
+if he was going to make water. Then by degrees he siddles nearer and
+nearer to where I stood, till at last he was close to me. 'Tis a very fine
+night,' says he. 'Aye,' say I, 'and so it is.' Then he takes me by the
+hand, and after squeezing and playing with it a <a name='2_Page_46'></a>little, he conveys it to
+his breeches,&quot; whereupon the detective seizes the man by his sexual organs
+and holds him until the constable comes up and effects an arrest.</p>
+
+<p>At the same period Margaret Clap, commonly called Mother Clap, kept a
+house in Field Lane, Holborn, which was a noted resort of the homosexual.
+To Mother Clap's Molly-house 30 or 40 clients would resort every night; on
+Sunday there might be as many as 50, for, as in Berlin and other cities
+today, that was the great homosexual gala night; there were beds in every
+room in this house. We are told that the &quot;men would sit in one another's
+laps, kissing in a lewd manner and using their hands indecently. Then they
+would get up, dance and make curtsies, and mimic the voices of women, 'Oh,
+fie, sir,'&mdash;'Pray, sir,'&mdash;'Dear sir,'&mdash;'Lord, how can you serve me
+so?'&mdash;'I swear I'll cry out,'&mdash;'You're a wicked devil,'&mdash;'And you're a
+bold face,'&mdash;'Eh, ye dear little toad,'&mdash;'Come, bus.' They'd hug and play
+and toy and go out by couples into another room, on the same floor, to be
+'married,' as they called it.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>On the whole one gains the impression that homosexual practices were more
+prevalent in London in the eighteenth century, bearing in mind its
+population at that time, than they are today.<a name='2_FNanchor_88'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_88'><sup>[88]</sup></a> It must not, however, be
+supposed that the law was indulgent and its administration lax. The very
+reverse was the case. The punishment for sodomy, when completely effected,
+was death, and it was frequently inflicted. Homosexual intercourse,
+without evidence of penetration, was regarded as &quot;attempt&quot; and was usually
+punished by the pillory and a heavy fine, followed by two years'
+imprisonment. Moreover, it would appear that more activity was shown by
+the police in prosecution than is nowadays the case; this is, for
+instance, suggested by the evidence of the detective already quoted. <a name='2_Page_47'></a></p>
+
+<p>To keep a homosexual resort was also a severely punishable offense. Mother
+Clap was charged at the Old Bailey in 1726 with &quot;keeping a sodomitical
+house&quot;; she protested that she could not herself have taken part in these
+practices, but that availed her nothing; she could bring forward no
+witnesses on her behalf and was condemned to pay a fine, to stand in the
+pillory, and to undergo imprisonment for two years. The cases were dealt
+with in a matter-of-fact way which seems to bear further witness to the
+frequency of the offense, and with no effort to expend any specially
+vindictive harshness on this class of offenders. If there was the
+slightest doubt as to the facts, even though the balance of evidence was
+against the accused, he was usually acquitted, and the man who could bring
+witnesses to his general good character might often thereby escape. In
+1721 a religious young man, married, was convicted of attempting sodomy
+with two young men he slept with; he was fined, placed in the pillory and
+imprisoned for two months. Next year a man was acquitted on a similar
+charge, and another man, of decent aspect, although the evidence indicated
+that he might have been guilty of sodomy, was only convicted of attempt,
+and sentenced to fine, pillory, and two years' imprisonment. In 1723,
+again, a schoolmaster was acquitted, on account of his good reputation, of
+the charge of attempt on a boy of 15, his pupil, though the evidence
+seemed decidedly against him. In 1730 a man was sentenced to death for
+sodomy effected on his young apprentice; this was a bad case and the
+surgeon's evidence indicated laceration of the perineum. Homosexuality of
+all kinds flourished, it will be seen, notwithstanding the fearless yet
+fair application of a very severe law.<a name='2_FNanchor_89'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_89'><sup>[89]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>In more recent times Byron has frequently been referred to as experiencing
+homosexual affections, and I have been informed that some of his poems
+nominally addressed to women were really inspired by men. It is certain
+that he experienced very strong emotions toward his male friends. &quot;My
+school-friendships,&quot;<a name='2_Page_48'></a> he wrote, &quot;were with me passions.&quot; When he afterward
+met one of these friends, Lord Clare, in Italy, he was painfully agitated;
+and could never hear the name without a beating of the heart. At the age
+of 22 he formed one of his strong attachments for a youth to whom he left
+&pound;7000 in his will.<a name='2_FNanchor_90'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_90'><sup>[90]</sup></a> It is probable, however, that here, as well as in
+the case of Shakespeare, and in that of Tennyson's love for his youthful
+friend, Arthur Hallam, as well as of Montaigne for Etienne de la Bo&euml;tie,
+although such strong friendships may involve an element of sexual emotion,
+we have no true and definite homosexual impulse; homosexuality is merely
+simulated by the ardent and hyperesthetic emotions of the poet.<a name='2_FNanchor_91'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_91'><sup>[91]</sup></a> The
+same quality of the poet's emotional temperament may doubtless, also, be
+invoked in the case of Goethe, who is said to have written elegies which,
+on account of their homosexual character, still remain unpublished.</p>
+
+<p>The most famous homosexual trial of recent times in England was that of
+Oscar Wilde, a writer whose literary reputation may be said to be still
+growing, not only in England but throughout the world. Wilde was the son
+of parents who were both of unusual ability and somewhat eccentric. Both
+these tendencies became in him more concentrated. He was born with, as it
+were, a congenital antipathy to the commonplace, a natural love of
+paradox, and he possessed the skill to embody the characteristic in
+finished literary form. At the same time, it must not be forgotten,
+beneath this natural attitude of paradox, his essential judgments on life
+and literature were usually sound and reasonable. His essay on &quot;The Soul
+of Man Under Socialism&quot; witnessed to <a name='2_Page_49'></a>his large and enlightened conception
+of life, and his profound admiration for Flaubert to the sanity and
+solidity of his literary taste. In early life he revealed no homosexual
+tendencies; he married and had children. After he had begun to outgrow his
+youthful esthetic extravagances, however, and to acquire success and fame,
+he developed what was at first a simply inquisitive interest in inversion.
+Such inquisitive interest is sometimes the sign of an emerging homosexual
+impulse. It proved to be so in Wilde's case and ultimately he was found to
+be cultivating the acquaintance of youths of low class and doubtful
+character. Although this development occurred comparatively late in life,
+we must hesitate to describe Wilde's homosexuality as acquired. If we
+consider his constitution and his history, it is not difficult to suppose
+that homosexual germs were present in a latent form from the first, and it
+may quite well be that Wilde's inversion was of that kind which is now
+described as retarded, though still congenital.</p>
+
+<p>As is usual in England, no active efforts were made to implicate Wilde in
+any criminal charge. It was his own action, as even he himself seems to
+have vaguely realized beforehand, which brought the storm about his head.
+He was arrested, tried, condemned, and at once there arose a general howl
+of execration, joined in even by the judge, whose attitude compared
+unfavorably with the more impartial attitude of the eighteenth century
+judges in similar cases. Wilde came out of prison ambitious to retrieve
+his reputation by the quality of his literary work. But he left Reading
+gaol merely to enter a larger and colder prison. He soon realized that his
+spirit was broken even more than his health. He drifted at last to Paris,
+where he shortly after died, shunned by all but a few of his friends.<a name='2_FNanchor_92'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_92'><sup>[92]</sup></a><a name='2_Page_50'></a></p>
+
+<p>In a writer of the first order, Edward Fitzgerald, to whom we owe the
+immortal and highly individualized version of <i>Omar Khayyam</i>, it is easy
+to trace an element of homosexuality, though it appears never to have
+reached full and conscious development. Fitzgerald was an eccentric person
+who, though rich and on friendly terms with some of the most distinguished
+men of his time, was always out of harmony with his environment. He felt
+himself called on to marry, very unhappily, a woman whom he had never been
+in love with and with whom he had nothing in common. All his affections
+were for his male friends. In early life he was devoted to his friend W. K.
+Browne, whom he glorified in <i>Euphranor</i>. &quot;To him Browne was at once
+Jonathan, Gamaliel, Apollo,&mdash;the friend, the master, the God,&mdash;there was
+scarcely a limit to his devotion and admiration.&quot;<a name='2_FNanchor_93'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_93'><sup>[93]</sup></a> On Browne's
+premature death Fitzgerald's heart was empty. In 1859 at Lowestoft,
+Fitzgerald, as he wrote to Mrs. Browne, &quot;used to wander about the shore at
+night longing for some fellow to accost me who might give some promise of
+filling up a very vacant place in my heart.&quot; It was then that he met
+&quot;Posh&quot; (Joseph Fletcher), a fisherman, 6 feet tall, said to be of the best
+Suffolk type, both in body and character. Posh reminded Fitzgerald of his
+dead friend Browne; he made him captain of his lugger, and was thereafter
+devoted to him. Posh was, said Fitzgerald, &quot;a man of the finest Saxon
+type, with a complexion <i>vif, m&acirc;le et flamboyant</i>, blue eyes, a nose less
+than Roman, more than Greek, and strictly auburn hair that any woman might
+envy. Further he was a man of simplicity; of soul, justice of thought,
+tenderness of nature, a gentleman of Nature's grandest type,&quot; in fact the
+&quot;greatest man&quot; Fitzgerald had ever met. Posh was not, however, quite so
+absolutely perfect as this description suggests, and various
+misunderstandings arose in consequence between <a name='2_Page_51'></a>the two friends so unequal
+in culture and social traditions. These difficulties are reflected in some
+of the yet extant letters from the enormous mass which Fitzgerald
+addressed to &quot;my dear Poshy.&quot;<a name='2_FNanchor_94'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_94'><sup>[94]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>A great personality of recent times, widely regarded with reverence as the
+prophet-poet of Democracy<a name='2_FNanchor_95'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_95'><sup>[95]</sup></a>&mdash;Walt Whitman&mdash;has aroused discussion by his
+sympathetic attitude toward passionate friendship, or &quot;manly love&quot; as he
+calls it, in <i>Leaves of Grass</i>. In this book&mdash;in &quot;Calamus,&quot; &quot;Drumtaps,&quot;
+and elsewhere&mdash;Whitman celebrates a friendship in which physical contact
+and a kind of silent voluptuous emotion are essential elements. In order
+to settle the question as to the precise significance of &quot;Calamus,&quot; J. A.
+Symonds wrote to Whitman, frankly posing the question. The answer (written
+from Camden, N. J., on August 19, 1890) is the only statement of Whitman's
+attitude toward homosexuality, and it is therefore desirable that it
+should be set on record:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class='blkquot'><p>&quot;About the questions on 'Calamus,' etc., they quite daze me.
+ <i>Leaves of Grass</i> is only to be rightly construed by and within
+ its own atmosphere and essential character&mdash;all its pages and
+ pieces so coming strictly under. That the 'Calamus' part has ever
+ allowed the possibility of such construction as mentioned is
+ terrible. I am fain to hope that the pages themselves are not to
+ be even mentioned for such gratuitous and quite at the time
+ undreamed and unwished possibility of morbid inferences&mdash;which
+ are disavowed by me and seem damnable.&quot; </p></div>
+
+<p>It would seem from this letter<a name='2_FNanchor_96'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_96'><sup>[96]</sup></a> that Whitman had never <a name='2_Page_52'></a>realized that
+there is any relationship whatever between the passionate emotion of
+physical contact from man to man, as he had experienced it and sung it,
+and the act which with other people he would regard as a crime against
+nature. This may be singular, for there are many inverted persons who have
+found satisfaction in friendships less physical and passionate than those
+described in <i>Leaves of Grass</i>, but Whitman was a man of concrete,
+emotional, instinctive temperament, lacking in analytical power, receptive
+to all influences, and careless of harmonizing them. He would most
+certainly have refused to admit that he was the subject of inverted
+sexuality. It remains true, however, that &quot;manly love&quot; occupies in his
+work a predominance which it would scarcely hold in the feelings of the
+&quot;average man,&quot; whom Whitman wishes to honor. A normally constituted
+person, having assumed the very frank attitude taken up by Whitman, would
+be impelled to devote far more space and far more ardor to the subject of
+sexual relationships with women and all that is involved in maternity than
+is accorded to them in <i>Leaves of Grass</i>. Some of Whitman's extant letters
+to young men, though they do not throw definite light on this question,
+are of a very affectionate character,<a name='2_FNanchor_97'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_97'><sup>[97]</sup></a> and, although a man of
+remarkable physical vigor, he never felt inclined to marry.<a name='2_FNanchor_98'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_98'><sup>[98]</sup></a> It remains
+somewhat <a name='2_Page_53'></a>difficult to classify him from the sexual point of view, but we
+can scarcely fail to recognize the presence of a homosexual tendency.</p>
+
+<div class='blkquot'><p>I should add that some friends and admirers of Whitman are not
+ prepared to accept the evidence of the letter to Symonds. I am
+ indebted to &quot;Q.&quot; for the following statement of the objections:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I think myself that it is a mistake to give much weight to this
+ letter&mdash;perhaps a mistake to introduce it at all, since if
+ introduced it will, of course, carry weight. And this for three
+ or four reasons:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p> &quot;1. That it is difficult to reconcile the letter itself (with its
+ strong tone of disapprobation) with the general 'atmosphere' of
+ <i>Leaves of Grass</i>, the tenor of which is to leave everything open
+ and free.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;2. That the letter is in hopeless conflict with the 'Calamus'
+ section of poems. For, whatever moral lines Whitman may have
+ drawn at the time of writing these poems, it seems to me quite
+ incredible that the possibility of certain inferences, morbid or
+ other, was undreamed of.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;3. That the letter was written only a few months before his last
+ illness and death, and is the only expression of the kind that he
+ appears to have given utterance to.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;4. That Symonds's letter, to which this was a reply, is not
+ forth coming; and we consequently do not know what rash
+ expressions it may have contained&mdash;leading Whitman (with his
+ extreme caution) to hedge his name from possible use to justify
+ dubious practices.&quot;</p>
+
+<p> I may add that I endeavored to obtain Symonds's letter, but he
+ was unable to produce it, nor has any copy of it been found among
+ his papers.</p>
+
+<p> It should be said that Whitman's attitude toward Symonds was
+ marked by high regard and admiration. &quot;A wonderful man is
+ Addington Symonds,&quot; he remarked shortly before his own death;
+ &quot;some ways the most indicative and penetrating and significant
+ man of our time. Symonds is a curious fellow; I love him dearly.
+ He is of college breed and education, horribly literary and
+ suspicious, and enjoys things. A great fellow for delving into
+ persons and into the concrete, and even into the physiological
+ and the gastric, and wonderfully cute.&quot; But on this occasion he
+ delved in vain.</p><a name='2_Page_54'></a>
+
+<p> The foregoing remarks (substantially contained in the previous
+ editions of this book) were based mainly on the information
+ received from J. A. Symonds's side. But of more recent years
+ interesting light has been thrown on this remarkable letter from
+ Walt Whitman's side. The Boswellian patience, enthusiasm, and
+ skill which Horace Traubel has brought to his full and elaborate
+ work, now in course of publication, <i>With Walt Whitman in
+ Camden</i>, clearly reveal, in the course of various conversations,
+ Whitman's attitude to Symonds's question and the state of mind
+ which led up to this letter.</p>
+
+<p> Whitman talked to Traubel much about Symonds from the
+ twenty-seventh of April, 1888 (very soon after the date when
+ Traubel's work begins), onward. Symonds had written to him
+ repeatedly, it seems, concerning the &quot;passional relations of men
+ with men,&quot; as Whitman expressed it. &quot;He is always driving at me
+ about that: is that what Calamus means?&mdash;because of me or in
+ spite of me, is that what it means? I have said no, but no does
+ not satisfy him. [There is, however, no record from Symonds's
+ side of any letter by Whitman to Symonds in this sense up to this
+ date.] But read this letter&mdash;read the whole of it: it is very
+ shrewd, very cute, in deadliest earnest: it drives me hard,
+ almost compels me&mdash;it is urgent, persistent: he sort of stands in
+ the road and says 'I won't move till you answer my question.' You
+ see, this is an old letter&mdash;sixteen years old&mdash;and he is still
+ asking the question: he refers to it in one of his latest notes.
+ He is surely a wonderful man&mdash;a rare, cleaned-up man&mdash;a
+ white-souled, heroic character.... You will be writing something
+ about Calamus some day,&quot; said W. [to Traubel], &quot;and this letter,
+ and what I say, may help to clear your ideas. Calamus needs clear
+ ideas; it may be easily, innocently distorted from its natural,
+ its motive, body of doctrine.&quot;</p>
+
+<p> The letter, dated Feb. 7, 1872, of some length, is then
+ reproduced. It tells how much <i>Leaves of Grass</i>, and especially
+ the Calamus section, had helped the writer. &quot;What the love of man
+ for man has been in the past,&quot; Symonds wrote, &quot;I think I know.
+ What it is here now, I know also&mdash;alas! What you say it can and
+ should be I dimly discern in your Poems. But this hardly
+ satisfies me&mdash;so desirous am I of learning what you teach. Some
+ day, perhaps,&mdash;in some form, I know not what, but in your own
+ chosen form,&mdash;you will tell me more about the Love of Friends.
+ Till then I wait.&quot;</p>
+
+<p> &quot;Said W: 'Well, what do you think of that? Do you think that
+ could be answered?' 'I don't see why you call that letter driving
+ you hard. It's quiet enough&mdash;it only asks questions, and asks the
+ questions mildly enough,' 'I suppose you are right&mdash;&quot;drive&quot; is
+ not exactly the word: yet you know how I hate to be catechised.
+ Symonds is <a name='2_Page_55'></a>right, no doubt, to ask the questions: I am just as
+ much right if I do not answer them: just as much right if I do
+ answer them. I often say to myself about Calamus&mdash;perhaps it
+ means more or less than what I thought myself&mdash;means different:
+ perhaps I don't know what it all means&mdash;perhaps never did know.
+ My first instinct about all that Symonds writes is violently
+ reactionary&mdash;is strong and brutal for no, no, no. Then the
+ thought intervenes that I maybe do not know all my own meanings:
+ I say to myself: &quot;You, too, go away, come back, study your own
+ book&mdash;as alien or stranger, study your own book, see what it
+ amounts to.&quot; Some time or other I will have to write to him
+ definitely about Calamus&mdash;give him my word for it what I meant or
+ mean it to mean.'&quot;</p>
+
+<p> Again, a month later (May 24, 1888), Whitman speaks to Traubel of
+ a &quot;beautiful letter&quot; from Symonds. &quot;You will see that he harps on
+ the Calamus poems again. I don't see why it should, but his
+ recurrence to that subject irritates me a little. I suppose you
+ might say&mdash;why don't you shut him up by answering him? There is
+ no logical answer to that I suppose: but I may ask in my turn:
+ 'What right has he to ask questions anyway?'&quot; W. laughed a bit.
+ &quot;Anyway the question comes back to me almost every time he
+ writes. He is courteous enough about it&mdash;that is the reason I do
+ not resent him. I suppose the whole thing will end in an answer
+ some day.&quot;</p>
+
+<p> The letter follows. The chief point in it is that the writer
+ hopes he has not been importunate in the question he had asked
+ about Calamus three years before.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I [Traubel] said to W.: 'That's a humble letter enough: I don't
+ see anything in that to get excited about. He doesn't ask you to
+ answer the old question. In fact he rather apologizes for having
+ asked it.' W. fired up 'Who is excited? As to that question, he
+ does ask it again and again: asks it, asks it, asks it.' I
+ laughed at his vehemence. 'Well, suppose he does? It does not
+ harm. Besides, you've got nothing to hide. I think your silence
+ might lead him to suppose there was a nigger in your wood pile.'
+ 'Oh, nonsense! But for thirty years my enemies and friends have
+ been asking me questions about the <i>Leaves</i>: I'm tired of not
+ answering questions.' It was very funny to see his face when he
+ gave a humorous twist to the fling in his last phrase. Then he
+ relaxed and added: 'Anyway I love Symonds. Who could fail to love
+ a man who could write such a letter? I suppose he will yet have
+ to be answered, damn 'im!'&quot; </p></div>
+
+<p>It is clear that these conversations considerably diminish the force of
+the declaration in Whitman's letter. We see that the letter which, on the
+face of it, might have represented the <a name='2_Page_56'></a>swift and indignant reaction of a
+man who, suddenly faced by the possibility that his work may be
+interpreted in a perverse sense, emphatically repudiates that
+interpretation, was really nothing of the kind. Symonds for at least
+eighteen years had been gently, considerately, even humbly, yet
+persistently, asking the same perfectly legitimate question. If the answer
+was really an emphatic no, it would more naturally have been made in 1872
+than 1890. Moreover, in the face of this ever-recurring question, Whitman
+constantly speaks to his friends of his great affection for Symonds and
+his admiration for his intellectual cuteness, feelings that would both be
+singularly out of place if applied to a man who was all the time
+suggesting the possibility that his writings contained inferences that
+were &quot;terrible,&quot; &quot;morbid,&quot; and &quot;damnable.&quot; Evidently, during all those
+years, Whitman could not decide what to reply. On the one hand he was
+moved by his horror of being questioned, by his caution, by his natural
+aversion to express approval of anything that could be called unnatural or
+abnormal. On the other hand, he was moved by the desire to let his work
+speak for itself, by his declared determination to leave everything open,
+and possibly by a more or less conscious sympathy with the inferences
+presented to him. It was not until the last years of his life, when his
+sexual life belonged to the past, when weakness was gaining on him, when
+he wished to put aside every drain on his energies, that&mdash;being
+constitutionally incapable of a balanced scientific statement&mdash;he chose
+the simplest and easiest solution of the difficulty.<a name='2_FNanchor_99'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_99'><sup>[99]</sup></a> <a name='2_Page_57'></a></p>
+
+<p>Concerning another great modern writer&mdash;Paul Verlaine, the first of modern
+French poets&mdash;it seems possible to speak with less hesitation. A man who
+possessed in fullest measure the irresponsible impressionability of
+genius, Verlaine&mdash;as his work shows and as he himself admitted&mdash;all his
+life oscillated between normal and homosexual love, at one period
+attracted to women, at another to men. He was without doubt, it seems to
+me, bisexual. An early connection with another young poet, Arthur Rimbaud,
+terminated in a violent quarrel with his friend, and led to Verlaine's
+imprisonment at Mons. In after-years he gave expression to the exalted
+passion of this relationship&mdash;<i>mon grand p&eacute;ch&eacute; radieux</i>&mdash;in <i>L&aelig;ti et
+Errabundi</i>, published in the volume entitled <i>Parall&egrave;lement</i>; and in later
+poems he has told of less passionate and less sensual relationships which
+yet were more than friendship, for instance, in the poem, &quot;<i>Mon ami, ma
+plus belle amiti&eacute;, ma Meilleure</i>&quot; in <i>Bonheur</i>.<a name='2_FNanchor_100'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_100'><sup>[100]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>In this brief glance at some of the ethnographical, historical, religious,
+and literary aspects of homosexual passion there is one other phenomenon
+which may be mentioned. This is the alleged fact that, while the phenomena
+exist to some extent everywhere, <a name='2_Page_58'></a>we seem to find a special proclivity to
+homosexuality (whether or not involving a greater frequency of congenital
+inversion is not usually clear) among certain races and in certain
+regions.<a name='2_FNanchor_101'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_101'><sup>[101]</sup></a> In Europe this would be best illustrated by the case of
+southern Italy, which in this respect is held to be distinct from northern
+Italy, although Italians generally are franker than men of northern race
+in admitting their sexual practices.<a name='2_FNanchor_102'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_102'><sup>[102]</sup></a> How far the supposed greater
+homosexuality of southern Italy may be due to Greek influence and Greek
+blood it is not very easy to say.</p>
+
+<p>It must be remembered that, in dealing with a northern country like
+England, homosexual phenomena do not present themselves in the same way as
+they do in southern Italy today, or in ancient Greece. In Greece the
+homosexual impulse was recognized and idealized; a man could be an open
+homosexual lover, and yet, like Epaminondas, be a great and honored
+citizen of his country. There was no reason whatever why a man, who in
+mental and physical constitution was perfectly normal, should not adopt a
+custom that was regarded as respectable, and sometimes as even specially
+honorable. But it is quite otherwise <a name='2_Page_59'></a>today in a country like England or
+the United States.<a name='2_FNanchor_103'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_103'><sup>[103]</sup></a> In these countries all our traditions and all our
+moral ideals, as well as the law, are energetically opposed to every
+manifestation of homosexual passion. It requires a very strong impetus to
+go against this compact social force which, on every side, constrains the
+individual into the paths of heterosexual love. That impetus, in a
+well-bred individual who leads the normal life of his fellow-men and who
+feels the ordinary degree of respect for the social feeling surrounding
+him, can only be supplied by a fundamental&mdash;usually, it is probable,
+inborn&mdash;perversion of the sexual instinct, rendering the individual
+organically abnormal. It is with this fundamental abnormality, usually
+called sexual inversion, that we shall here be concerned. There is no
+evidence to show that homosexuality in Greece was a congenital perversion,
+although it appears that C&oelig;lius Aurelianus affirms that in the
+opinion of Parmenides it was hereditary. Aristotle also, in his fragment
+on physical love, though treating the whole matter with indulgence, seems
+to have distinguished abnormal congenital homosexuality from acquired
+homosexual vice. Doubtless in a certain proportion of cases the impulse
+was organic, and it may well be that there was an organic and racial
+predisposition to homosexuality among the Greeks, or, at all events, the
+Dorians. But the state of social feeling, however it originated, induced a
+large proportion of the ordinary population to adopt homosexuality as a
+fashion, or, it may be said, the environment was peculiarly favorable to
+the development of latent homosexual tendencies. So that any given number
+of homosexual persons among the Greeks would have presented a far smaller
+proportion of constitutionally abnormal individuals than a like number in
+England. In a similar manner&mdash;though I do not regard the analogy as
+complete&mdash;infanticide or the exposition of children was practised in some
+of the early Greek States by parents who were completely healthy and
+normal; in England a married <a name='2_Page_60'></a>woman who destroys her child is in nearly
+every case demonstrably diseased or abnormal. For this reason I am unable
+to see that homosexuality in ancient Greece&mdash;while of great interest as a
+social and psychological problem&mdash;throws light on sexual inversion as we
+know it in England or the United States.</p>
+
+<p>Concerning the wide prevalence of sexual inversion and of homosexual
+phenomena generally, there can be no manner of doubt. This question has
+been most fully investigated in Germany. In Berlin, Moll states that he
+has himself seen between 600 and 700 homosexual persons and heard of some
+250 to 350 others. Hirschfeld states that he has known over 10,000
+homosexual persons.</p>
+
+<p>There are, I am informed, several large caf&eacute;s in Berlin which are almost
+exclusively patronized by inverts who come here to flirt and make
+acquaintances; as these caf&eacute;s are frequented by male street prostitutes
+(Pupenjunge) the invert risks being blackmailed or robbed if he goes home
+or to a hotel with a caf&eacute; acquaintance. There are also a considerable
+number of homosexual <i>Kneipen</i>, small and unpretentious bar-rooms, which
+are really male brothels, the inmates being sexually normal working men
+and boys, out of employment or in quest of a few marks as pocket money;
+these places are regarded by inverts as very safe, as the proprietors
+insist on good order and allow no extortion, while the police, though of
+course aware of their existence, never interfere. Homosexual caf&eacute;s for
+women are also found in Berlin.</p>
+
+<p>There is some reason for believing that homosexuality is especially
+prominent in Germany and among Germans. I have elsewhere referred to the
+highly emotional and sentimental traits which have frequently marked
+German friendships. Germany is the only country in which there is a
+definite and well-supported movement for the defense and social
+rehabilitation of inverts. The study of sexual inversion began in Germany,
+and the scientific and literary publications dealing with homosexuality
+issued from the German press probably surpass in quantity and importance
+those issued from all other countries put together. The <a name='2_Page_61'></a>homosexual
+tendencies of Germans outside Germany have been noted in various
+countries. Among my English cases I have found that a strain of German
+blood occurs much more frequently than we are entitled to expect; Parisian
+prostitutes are said to be aware of the homosexual tastes of Germans; it
+is significant that (as a German invert familiar with Turkey informed
+N&auml;cke), at Constantinople, the procurers, who naturally supply girls as
+well as youths, regard Germans and Austrians as more tending to
+homosexuality than the foreigners from any other land. Germans usually
+deny, however, that there is any special German proclivity to inversion,
+and it would not appear that such statistics as are available (though all
+such statistics cannot be regarded as more than approximations) show any
+pronounced predominance of inversion among Germans. It is to Hirschfeld
+that we owe the chief attempt to gain some notion of the percentage of
+homosexual persons among the general population.<a name='2_FNanchor_104'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_104'><sup>[104]</sup></a> It may be said to
+vary in different regions and more especially in different occupations,
+from 1 to 10 per cent. But the average when the individuals belonging to a
+large number of groups are combined is generally found to be rather over 2
+per cent. So that there are about a million and a half inverted persons in
+Germany.<a name='2_FNanchor_105'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_105'><sup>[105]</sup></a> This would be a minimum which can scarcely fail to be below
+the actual proportion, as no one can be certain that he is acquainted with
+the real proclivities of all the persons comprising a larger group of
+acquaintances.<a name='2_FNanchor_106'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_106'><sup>[106]</sup></a> It is not found in the estimates which have reached
+Hirschfeld that the French groups show a smaller proportion of homosexual
+persons than the German groups, and a Japanese group comes out near <a name='2_Page_62'></a>to
+the general average for the whole. Various authorities, especially
+Germans, believe that homosexuality is just as common in France as in
+Germany.<a name='2_FNanchor_107'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_107'><sup>[107]</sup></a> Saint-Paul (&quot;Dr. Laupts&quot;), on the other hand, is unable to
+accept this view. As an army surgeon who has long served in Africa he can
+(as also Rebierre in his <i>Joyeux et demifous</i>) bear witness to the
+frequency of homosexuality among the African battalions of the French
+army, especially in the cavalry, less so in the infantry; in the French
+army generally he finds it rare, as also in the general population.<a name='2_FNanchor_108'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_108'><sup>[108]</sup></a>
+N&auml;cke is also inclined to believe that homosexuality is rarer in Celtic
+lands, and in the Latin countries generally, than in Teutonic and Slavonic
+lands, and believes that it may be a question of race.<a name='2_FNanchor_109'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_109'><sup>[109]</sup></a> The question
+is still undecided. It is possible that the undoubted fact that
+homosexuality is less conspicuous in France and the other Latin countries
+than in Teutonic lands, may be due not to the occurrence of a smaller
+proportion of congenital inverts in the former lands, but mainly to
+general difference in temperament and in the social reaction.<a name='2_FNanchor_110'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_110'><sup>[110]</sup></a> The
+French idealize and emphasize the place of women to a much greater degree
+than the Germans, while at the same time inverts in France have much less
+occasion than in Germany to proclaim their legal grievances. Apart from
+such considerations as these it seems very doubtful whether inborn
+inversion is in any considerable degree rarer in France than in Germany.</p>
+
+<p>As to the frequency of homosexuality in England<a name='2_FNanchor_111'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_111'><sup>[111]</sup></a> and the<a name='2_Page_63'></a> United
+States there is much evidence. In England its manifestations are well
+marked for those whose eyes have once been opened. The manifestations are
+of the same character as those in Germany, modified by social and national
+differences, and especially by the greater reserve, Puritanism, and
+prudery of England.<a name='2_FNanchor_112'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_112'><sup>[112]</sup></a> In the United States these same influences exert
+a still greater effect in restraining the outward manifestations of
+homosexuality. Hirschfeld, though so acute and experienced in the
+investigation of homosexuality, states that when visiting Philadelphia and
+Boston he could scarcely detect any evidence of homosexuality, though he
+was afterward assured by those acquainted with local conditions that its
+extension in both cities is &quot;colossal.&quot; There have been numerous criminal
+cases and scandals in the United States in which homosexuality has come to
+the surface, and the very frequently occurring cases of transvestism or
+cross-dressing in the States seem to be in a large proportion associated
+with homosexuality.</p>
+
+<p>In the opinion of some, English homosexuality has become much more
+conspicuous during recent years, and this is sometimes attributed to the
+Oscar Wilde case. No doubt, the celebrity of Oscar Wilde and the universal
+publicity given to the facts of the case by the newspapers may have
+brought conviction of their perversion to many inverts who were before
+only vaguely conscious of their abnormality, and, paradoxical though it
+may seem, have imparted greater courage to others; but it can scarcely
+have sufficed to increase the number of inverts. Rather, one may say, the
+development of urban life renders easier the exhibition and satisfaction
+of this as of all other forms of perversion. Regarding the proportion of
+inverts among the general population, it is very difficult to speak
+positively. The invert himself is a misleading guide because he has formed
+round himself a special coterie of homosexual persons, and, moreover, he
+is sometimes apt to overestimate the number of inverts through the
+misinterpretation <a name='2_Page_64'></a>of small indications that are not always conclusive.
+The estimate of the ordinary normal person, feeling the ordinary disgust
+toward abnormal phenomena, is also misleading, because his homosexual
+acquaintances are careful not to inform him concerning their proclivities.
+A writer who has studied the phenomena of homosexuality is apt to be
+misguided in the same way as the invert himself, and to overestimate the
+prevalence of the perversion. Striving to put aside this source of
+fallacy, and only considering those individuals with whom I have been
+brought in contact by the ordinary circumstances of life, and with whose
+modes of feeling I am acquainted, I am still led to the conclusion that
+the proportion is considerable. Among the professional and most cultured
+element of the middle class in England, there must be a distinct
+percentage of inverts which may sometimes be as much as 5 per cent.,
+though such estimates must always be hazardous. Among women of the same
+class the percentage seems to be at least double, though here the
+phenomena are less definite and deep-seated. This seems to be a moderate
+estimate for this class, which includes, however, it must be remembered, a
+considerable proportion of individuals who are somewhat abnormal in other
+respects. As we descend the scale the phenomena are doubtless less common,
+though when we reach the working class we come to that comparative
+indifference to which allusion has already been made. Taken altogether we
+may probably conclude that the proportion of inverts is the same as in
+other related and neighboring lands, that is to say, slightly over 2 per
+cent. That would give the homosexual population of Great Britain as
+somewhere about a million.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_1'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_1'>[1]</a> Taking all its forms <i>en bloc</i>, as they are known to the
+police, homosexuality is seen to possess formidable proportions. Thus in
+France, from official papers which passed through M. Carlier's bureau
+during ten years (1860-70), he compiled a list of 6342 pederasts who came
+within the cognizance of the police; 2049 Parisians, 3709 provincials, and
+584 foreigners. Of these, 3432, or more than the half, could not be
+convicted of illegal acts.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_2'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_2'>[2]</a> The chief general collection of data (not here drawn upon)
+concerning homosexuality among animals is by the zo&ouml;logist Prof. Karsch,
+&quot;P&auml;derastie und Tribadie bei den Tieren,&quot; <i>Jahrbuch f&uuml;r sexuelle
+Zwischenstufen</i>, vol. ii. Brehm's <i>Tierleben</i> also contains many examples.
+See also a short chapter (ch. xxix) in Hirschfeld's <i>Homosexualit&auml;t</i>.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_3'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_3'>[3]</a> H. Sainte-Claire Deville, &quot;De l'Internat et son influence sur
+l'education de la jeunesse,&quot; a paper read to the Acad&eacute;mie des Sciences
+Morales et Politiques, July 27, 1871, and quoted by Chevalier,
+<i>L'Inversion Sexuelle</i>, pp. 204-5.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_4'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_4'>[4]</a> M. Bombarda, <i>Comptes rendus Congr&egrave;s Internationale de
+l'Anthropologie Criminelle</i>, Amsterdam, p. 212.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_5'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_5'>[5]</a> Lacassagne, &quot;De la Criminalit&eacute; chez les Animaux,&quot; <i>Revue
+Scientifique</i>, 1882.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_6'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_6'>[6]</a> Steinach, &quot;Utersuchungen zu vergleichende Physiologie,&quot;
+<i>Archiv f&uuml;r die Gesammte Physiologie</i>, Bd. lvi, 1894, p. 320.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_7'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_7'>[7]</a> F&eacute;r&eacute;, <i>Comptes-rendus Soci&eacute;t&eacute; de Biologie</i>, July 30, 1898. We
+may perhaps connect this with an observation of E. Selous (<i>Zo&ouml;logist</i>,
+May and Sept., 1901) on a bird, the Great Crested Grebe; after pairing,
+the male would crouch to the female, who played his part to him; the same
+thing is found among pigeons. Selous suggests that this is a relic of
+primitive hermaphroditism. But it may be remembered that in the male
+generally sexual intercourse tends to be more exhausting than in the
+female; this fact would favor a reversion of their respective parts.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_8'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_8'>[8]</a> E. Selous, &quot;Sexual Selection in Birds,&quot; <i>Zo&ouml;logist</i>, Feb.,
+1907, p. 65; <i>ib.</i>, May, p. 169. Sexual aberrations generally are not
+uncommon among birds; see, <i>e.g.</i>, A. Heim, &quot;Sexuelle Verirrungen bei
+V&ouml;geln in den Tropen,&quot; <i>Sexual-Probleme</i>, April, 1913.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_9'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_9'>[9]</a> See Moll, <i>Untersuchungen &uuml;ber die Libido Sexualis</i>, 1898,
+Bd. i, pp. 369, 374-5. For a summary of facts concerning homosexuality in
+animals see F. Karsch, &quot;P&auml;derastie und Tribadie bei den Tieren auf Grund
+der Literatur,&quot; <i>Jahrbuch f&uuml;r sexuelle Zwischenstufen</i>, Bd. ii, 1899, pp.
+126-154</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_10'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_10'>[10]</a> Muccioli, &quot;Degenerazione e Criminalit&agrave; nei Colombi,&quot;
+<i>Archivio di Psichiatria</i>, 1893, p. 40.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_11'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_11'>[11]</a> <i>L'Interm&eacute;diare des Biologistes</i>, November 20, 1897.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_12'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_12'>[12]</a> R. I. Pocock, <i>Field</i>, 25 Oct., 1913.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_13'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_13'>[13]</a> R. S. Rutherford, &quot;Crowing Hens,&quot; <i>Poultry</i>, January 26,
+1896.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_14'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_14'>[14]</a> This has now been very thoroughly done by Prof. F.
+Karsch-Haack in a large book, <i>Das Gleichgeschlechtliche Leben der
+Naturv&ouml;lker</i>, 1911. An earlier and shorter study by the same author was
+published in the <i>Jahrbuch f&uuml;r sexuelle Zwischenstufen</i>, Bd. iii, 1901.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_15'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_15'>[15]</a> See a brief and rather inconclusive treatment of the
+question by Bruns Meissner, &quot;Assyriologische Studien,&quot; iv, <i>Mitteilungen
+der Vorderasiatischen Gesellschaft</i>, 1907.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_16'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_16'>[16]</a> <i>Monatshefte f&uuml;r praktische Dermatologie</i>, Bd. xxix, 1899,
+p. 409.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_17'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_17'>[17]</a> Hirschfeld, <i>Die Homosexualit&auml;t</i>, p. 739.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_18'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_18'>[18]</a> Beardmore also notes that sodomy is &quot;regularly indulged in&quot;
+in New Guinea on this account. (<i>Journal of the Anthropological
+Institute</i>, May, 1890, p. 464.)</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_19'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_19'>[19]</a> I have been told by medical men in India that it is
+specially common among the Sikhs, the finest soldier-race in India.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_20'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_20'>[20]</a> Foley, <i>Bulletin Soci&eacute;t&eacute; d'Anthropologie de Paris</i>, October
+9, 1879.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_21'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_21'>[21]</a> See, <i>e.g.</i>, O. Kiefer, &quot;Plato's Stellung zu
+Homosexualit&auml;t,&quot; <i>Jahrbuch f&uuml;r sexuelle Zwischenstufen</i>, vol. vii.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_22'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_22'>[22]</a> Bethe, <i>op. cit.</i>, p. 440. In old Japan (before the
+revolution of 1868) also, however, according to F. S. Krauss (<i>Das
+Geschlechtsleben der Japaner</i>, ch. xiii, 1911), the homosexual relations
+between knights and their pages resembled those of ancient Greece.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_23'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_23'>[23]</a> <i>Archiv f&uuml;r Kriminal-Anthropologie</i>, 1906, p. 106.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_24'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_24'>[24]</a> <i>Zeitschrift f&uuml;r Sexualwissenschaft</i>, 1914, Heft 2, p. 73.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_25'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_25'>[25]</a> Among the Sarts of Turkestan a class of well-trained and
+educated homosexual prostitutes, resembling those found in China and many
+regions of northern Asia, bearing also the same name of <i>batsha</i>, are said
+to be especially common because fostered by the scarcity of women through
+polygamy and by the women's ignorance and coarseness. The institution of
+the <i>batsha</i> is supposed to have come to Turkestan from Persia. (Herman,
+&quot;Die P&auml;derastie bei den Sarten,&quot; <i>Sexual-Probleme</i>, June, 1911.) This
+would seem to suggest that Persia may have been a general center of
+diffusions of this kind of refined homosexuality in northern Asia.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_26'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_26'>[26]</a> Morache, art. &quot;Chine,&quot; <i>Dictionnaire Encyclop&eacute;dique des
+Sciences M&eacute;dicales</i>; Matignon, &quot;La P&eacute;derastie en Chine,&quot; <i>Archives
+d'Anthropologie Criminelle</i>, Jan., 1899; Von der Choven, summarized in
+<i>Archives de Neurologie</i>, March, 1907; Sci&eacute;-Ton-Fa, &quot;L'Homosexualit&eacute; en
+Chine,&quot; <i>Revue de l'Hypnotisme</i>, April, 1909.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_27'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_27'>[27]</a> <i>Moeurs des Peuples de l'Inde</i>, 1825, vol. i, part ii, ch.
+xii. In Lahore and Lucknow, as quoted by Burton, Daville describes &quot;men
+dressed as women, with flowing locks under crowns of flowers, imitating
+the feminine walk and gestures, voice and fashion of speech, ogling their
+admirer with all the coquetry of bayaderes.&quot;</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_28'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_28'>[28]</a> <i>Voyages and Travels</i>, 1814, part ii, p. 47.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_29'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_29'>[29]</a> A. Lisiansky, <i>Voyage, etc.</i>, London, 1814, p. 1899.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_30'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_30'>[30]</a> <i>Ethnographische Skizzen</i>, 1855, p. 121.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_31'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_31'>[31]</a> C. F. P. von Martius, <i>Zur Ethnographie Amerika's</i>, Leipzig,
+1867, Bd. i, p. 74. In Ancient Mexico Bernal Diaz wrote: <i>Erant quasi
+omnes sodomia commaculati, et adolescentes multi, muliebriter vestiti,
+ibant publice, cibum quarentes ab isto diabolico et abominabili labore</i>.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_32'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_32'>[32]</a> Hammond, <i>Sexual Impotence</i>, pp. 163-174.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_33'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_33'>[33]</a> <i>New York Medical Journal</i>, Dec. 7, 1889.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_34'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_34'>[34]</a> J. Turnbull, &quot;<i>A Voyage Round the World in the Year 1800</i>,&quot;
+etc., 1813, p. 382.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_35'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_35'>[35]</a> <i>Annales d'Hygi&egrave;ne et de M&eacute;decine Coloniale</i>, 1899, p. 494.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_36'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_36'>[36]</a> Oskar Baumann, &quot;Contr&auml;re Sexual-Erscheinungen bei die
+Neger-Bev&ouml;lkerung Zanzibars,&quot; <i>Zeitschrift f&uuml;r Ethnologie</i>, 1899, Heft 6,
+p. 668.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_37'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_37'>[37]</a> Rev. J. H. Weeks, <i>Journal Anthropological Institute</i>, 1909,
+p. 449. I am informed by a medical correspondent in the United States that
+inversion is extremely prevalent among American negroes. &quot;I have good
+reason to believe,&quot; he writes, &quot;that it is far more prevalent among them
+than among the white people of any nation. If inversion is to be regarded
+as a penalty of 'civilization' this is remarkable. Perhaps, however, the
+Negro, <i>relatively to his capacity</i>, is more highly civilized than we are;
+at any rate his civilization has been thrust upon him, and not acquired
+through the long throes of evolution. Colored inverts desire white men as
+a rule, but are not averse to men of their own race. I believe that 10 per
+cent, of Negroes in the United States are sexually inverted.&quot;</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_38'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_38'>[38]</a> Among the Papuans of German New Guinea, where the women have
+great power, marriage is late, and the young men are compelled to live
+separated from the women in communal houses. Here, says Moskowski
+(<i>Zeitschrift f&uuml;r Ethnologie</i>, 1911, Heft 2, p. 339), homosexual orgies
+are openly carried on.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_39'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_39'>[39]</a> C. G. Seligmann, &quot;Sexual Inversion Among Primitive Races,&quot;
+<i>Alienist and Neurologist</i>, Jan., 1902. In a tale of the Western Solomon
+Islands, reported by J. C. Wheeler (<i>Anthropophyteia</i>, vol. ix, p. 376) we
+find a story of a man who would be a woman, and married another man and
+did woman's work.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_40'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_40'>[40]</a> Hardman, &quot;Habits and Customs of Natives of Kimberley,
+Western Australia,&quot; <i>Proceedings Royal Irish Academy</i>, 3d series, vol. i,
+1889, p. 73.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_41'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_41'>[41]</a> Klaatsch, &quot;Some Notes on Scientific Travel Amongst the Black
+Populations of Tropic Australia,&quot; Adelaide meeting of <i>Australian
+Association for the Advancement of Science</i>, January, 1907, p. 5.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_42'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_42'>[42]</a> In further illustration of this I have been told that among
+the common people there is often no feeling against connection with a
+woman <i>per anum</i>.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_43'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_43'>[43]</a> Chevalier (<i>L'Inversion Sexuelle</i>, pp. 85-106) brings
+forward a considerable amount of evidence regarding homosexuality at Rome
+under the emperors. See also Moll, <i>Kontr&auml;re Sexualempfindung</i>, 1899, pp.
+56-66, and Hirschfeld, <i>Homosexualit&auml;t</i>, 1913, pp. 789-806. On the
+literary side, Petronius best reveals the homosexual aspect of Roman life
+about the time of Tiberius.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_44'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_44'>[44]</a> J. A. Symonds wrote an interesting essay on this subject; see
+also Kiefer, <i>Jahrbuch f. sex. Zwischenstufen</i>, vol. viii, 1906.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_45'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_45'>[45]</a> See L. von Scheffler, &quot;Elagabal,&quot; <i>Jahrbuch f. sex.
+Zwischenstufen</i>, vol. iii, 1901; also Duviquet, <i>H&eacute;liogabale (Mercure de
+France</i>).</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_46'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_46'>[46]</a> The following note has been furnished to me: &quot;Balzac, in
+<i>Une Derni&egrave;re Incarnation de Vautrin</i>, describes the morals of the French
+<i>bagnes</i>. Dostoieffsky, in <i>Prison-Life in Siberia</i>, touches on the same
+subject. See his portrait of Sirotkin, p. 52 <i>et seq.</i>, p. 120 (edition J.
+and R. Maxwell, London). We may compare Carlier, <i>Les Deux Prostitutions</i>,
+pp. 300-1, for an account of the violence of homosexual passions in French
+prisons. The initiated are familiar with the fact in English prisons.
+Bouchard, in his <i>Confessions</i>, Paris, Liseux, 1881, describes the convict
+station at Marseilles in 1630.&quot; Homosexuality among French recidivists at
+Saint-Jean-du-Maroni in French Guiana has been described by Dr. Cazanova,
+<i>Arch. d'Anth. Crim.</i>, January, 1906, p. 44. See also Davitt's <i>Leaves
+from a Prison Diary</i>, and Berkman's <i>Prison Memoirs of an Anarchist</i>; also
+Rebierre, <i>Joyeux et Demifous</i>, 1909.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_47'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_47'>[47]</a> D. McMurtrie, <i>Chicago Medical Recorder</i>, January, 1914.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_48'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_48'>[48]</a> See Appendix A: &quot;Homosexuality among Tramps,&quot; by &quot;Josiah
+Flynt.&quot;</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_49'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_49'>[49]</a> <i>Inferno</i>, xv. The place of homosexuality in the <i>Divine
+Comedy</i> itself has been briefly studied by Undine Fre&uuml;n von Verschuer,
+<i>Jahrbuch f&uuml;r sexuelle Zwischenstufen</i>, Bd. viii, 1906.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_50'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_50'>[50]</a> Hirschfeld and others have pointed out, very truly, that
+inverts are less prone than normal persons to regard caste and social
+position. This innately democratic attitude renders it easier for them
+than for ordinary people to rise to what Cyples has called the &quot;ecstasy of
+humanity,&quot; the emotional attitude, that is to say, of those rare souls of
+whom it may be said, in the same writer's words, that &quot;beggars' rags to
+their unhesitating lips grew fit for kissing because humanity had touched
+the garb.&quot; Edward Carpenter (<i>Intermediate Types among Primitive Folk</i>, p.
+83) remarks that great ethical leaders have often exhibited feminine
+traits, and adds: &quot;It becomes easy to suppose of those early figures&mdash;who
+once probably were men&mdash;those Apollos, Buddhas, Dionysus, Osiris, and so
+forth&mdash;to suppose that they too were somewhat bisexual in temperament, and
+that it was really largely owing to that fact that they were endowed with
+far-reaching powers and became leaders of mankind.&quot;</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_51'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_51'>[51]</a> English translation, <i>Primitive Folk</i>, in Contemporary
+Science series.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_52'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_52'>[52]</a> R. Horneffer, <i>Der Priester</i>, 2 vols., 1912. J. G. Frazer, in
+the volume entitled &quot;Adonis, Attis, Osiris&quot; (pp. 428-435) of the third
+edition of his <i>Golden Bough</i>, discusses priests dressed as women, and
+finds various reasons for the custom.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_53'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_53'>[53]</a> Edward Carpenter, <i>Intermediate Types among Primitive Folk</i>,
+1914.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_54'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_54'>[54]</a> Westermarck, <i>Origin and Development of Moral Ideas</i>, vol.
+ii, ch. xliii.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_55'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_55'>[55]</a> &quot;Italian literature,&quot; remarks Symonds, &quot;can show the <i>Rime
+Burlesche</i>, Becadelli's <i>Hermaphroditus</i>, the <i>Canti Carnascialeschi</i>, the
+Macaronic poems of Fidentius, and the remarkably outspoken romance
+entitled <i>Alcibiade Fanciullo a Scola</i>.&quot;</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_56'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_56'>[56]</a> The life of Muret has been well written by C. Dejob,
+<i>Marc-Antoine Muret</i>, 1881.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_57'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_57'>[57]</a> F. M. Nichols, <i>Epistles of Erasmus</i>, vol. i, pp. 44-55.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_58'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_58'>[58]</a> Burckhardt, <i>Die Kultur der Renaissance</i>, vol. ii,
+<i>Excursus</i> ci.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_59'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_59'>[59]</a> F. de Gaudenzi in ch. v of his <i>Studio Psico-patologico
+sopra T. Tasso</i> (1899) deals fully with the poet's homosexual tendencies.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_60'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_60'>[60]</a> Herbert P. Horne, <i>Leonardo da Vinci</i>, 1903, p. 12.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_61'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_61'>[61]</a> S. Freud, <i>Eine Kindheitserinnerung des Leonardo da Vinci</i>,
+1910.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_62'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_62'>[62]</a> See Parlagreco, <i>Michelangelo Buonarotti</i>, Naples, 1888;
+Ludwig von Scheffler, <i>Michelangelo: Ein Renaissance Studie</i>, 1892;
+<i>Archivo di Psichiatria</i>, vol. xv, fasc. i, ii, p. 129; J. A. Symonds,
+<i>Life of Michelangelo</i>, 1893; Dr. Jur. Numa Praetorius, &quot;Michel Angelo's
+Urningtum,&quot; <i>Jahrbuch f&uuml;r sexuelle Zwischenstufen</i>, vol. ii, 1899, pp,
+254-267.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_63'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_63'>[63]</a> J. A. Symonds, <i>Life of Michelangelo</i>, vol. ii, p. 384.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_64'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_64'>[64]</a> Sodoma's life and temperament have been studied and his
+pictures copiously reproduced by Elis&aacute;r von Kupffer, <i>Jahrbuch f&uuml;r
+sexuelle Zwischenstufen</i>, Bd. ix, 1908, p. 71 <i>et seq.</i>, and by R. H.
+Hobart Cust, <i>Giovanni Antonio Bazzi</i>.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_65'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_65'>[65]</a> Cellini, <i>Life</i>, translated by J. A. Symonds, introduction,
+p. xxxv, and p. 448. Queringhi (<i>La Psiche di B. Cellini</i>, 1913) argues
+that Cellini was not homosexual.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_66'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_66'>[66]</a> See the interesting account of Duquesnoy by Eekhoud
+(<i>Jahrbuch f&uuml;r sexuelle Zwischenstufen</i>, Bd. ii, 1899), an eminent Belgian
+novelist who has himself been subjected to prosecution on account of the
+pictures of homosexuality in his novels and stories, <i>Escal-Vigor</i> and <i>Le
+Cycle Patibulaire</i> (see <i>Jahrbuch f&uuml;r sexuelle Zwischenstufen</i>, Bd. iii,
+1901).</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_67'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_67'>[67]</a> See Justi's <i>Life of Winkelmann</i>, and also Moll's <i>Die
+Kontr&auml;re Sexualempfindung</i>, third edition, 1899, pp. 122-126. In this
+work, as well as in Raffalovich's <i>Uranisme et Unisexualit&eacute;</i>, as also in
+Moll's <i>Ber&uuml;hmte Homosexuelle</i> (1910) and Hirschfeld's <i>Die
+Homosexualit&auml;t</i>, p. 650 <i>et seq.</i>, there will be found some account of
+many eminent men who are, on more or less reliable grounds, suspected of
+homosexuality. Other German writers brought forward as inverted are
+Platen, K. P. Moritz, and Iffland. Platen was clearly a congenital invert,
+who sought, however, the satisfaction of his impulses in Platonic
+friendship; his homosexual poems and the recently published unabridged
+edition of his diary render him an interesting object of study; see for a
+sympathetic account of him, Ludwig Frey, &quot;Aus dem Seelenleben des Grafen
+Platen,&quot; <i>Jahrbuch f&uuml;r sexuelle Zwischenstufen</i>, vols. i and vi. Various
+kings and potentates have been mentioned in this connection, including the
+Sultan Baber; Henri III of France; Edward II, William II, James I, and
+William III of England, and perhaps Queen Anne and George III, Frederick
+the Great and his brother, Heinrich, Popes Paul II, Sixtus IV, and Julius
+II, Ludwig II of Bavaria, and others. Kings, indeed, seem peculiarly
+inclined to homosexuality.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_68'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_68'>[68]</a> Schultz, <i>Das H&ouml;fische Leben</i>, Bd. i, ch. xiii.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_69'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_69'>[69]</a> <i>De Planctu Natur&aelig;</i> has been translated by Douglas Moffat,
+<i>Yale Studies in English</i>, No. xxxvi, 1908.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_70'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_70'>[70]</a> P. de l'Estoile, <i>M&eacute;moires-Journaux</i>, vol. ii, p. 326.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_71'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_71'>[71]</a> Laborde, <i>Le Palais Mazarin</i>, p. 128.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_72'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_72'>[72]</a> Thus she writes in 1701 (<i>Correspondence</i>, edited by Brunet,
+vol. i, p. 58): &quot;Our heroes take as their models Hercules, Theseus,
+Alexander, and C&aelig;sar, who all had their male favorites. Those who give
+themselves up to this vice, while believing in Holy Scripture, imagine
+that it was only a sin when there were few people in the world, and that
+now the earth is populated it may be regarded as a <i>divertissement</i>. Among
+the common people, indeed, accusations of this kind are, so far as
+possible, avoided; but among persons of quality it is publicly spoken of;
+it is considered a fine saying that since Sodom and Gomorrah, the Lord has
+punished no one for such offences.&quot;</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_73'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_73'>[73]</a> S&eacute;rieux and Libert, &quot;La Bastille et ses Prisonniers,&quot;
+<i>L'Enc&eacute;phale</i>, September, 1911.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_74'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_74'>[74]</a> Witry, &quot;Notes Historiques sur l'Homosexualit&eacute; en France,&quot;
+<i>Revue de l'Hypnotisme</i>, January, 1909.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_75'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_75'>[75]</a> In early Teutonic days there was little or no trace of any
+punishment for homosexual practices in Germany. This, according to Hermann
+Micha&euml;lis, only appeared after the Church had gained power among the West
+Goths; in the Breviarium of Alaric II (506), the sodomist was condemned to
+the stake, and later, in the seventh century, by an edict of King
+Chindasvinds, to castration. The Frankish capitularies of Charlemange's
+time adopted ecclesiastical penances. In the thirteenth and fourteenth
+centuries death by fire was ordained, and the punishments enacted by the
+German codes tended to become much more ferocious than that edicted by the
+Justinian code on which they were modelled.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_76'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_76'>[76]</a> Raffalovich discusses German friendship, <i>Uranisme et
+Unisexualit&eacute;</i>, pp. 157-9. See also Birnbaum, <i>Jahrbuch f&uuml;r sexuelle
+Zwischenstufen</i>, Bd. viii, p. 611; he especially illustrates this kind of
+friendship by the correspondence of the poets Gleim and Jacobi, who used
+to each other the language of lovers, which, indeed, they constantly
+called themselves.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_77'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_77'>[77]</a> This letter may be found in Ernst Schur's <i>Heinrich von
+Kleist in seinen Briefen</i>, p. 295. Dr. J. Sadger has written a
+pathographic and psychological study of Kleist, emphasizing the homosexual
+strain, in the <i>Grenzfragen des Nerven- und Seelenlebens</i> series.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_78'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_78'>[78]</a> Alexander's not less distinguished brother, Wilhelm von
+Humboldt, though not homosexual, possessed, a woman wrote to him, &quot;the
+soul of a woman and the most tender feeling for womanliness I have ever
+found in your sex;&quot; he himself admitted the feminine traits in his nature.
+Spranger (<i>Wilhelm von Humboldt</i>, p. 288) says of him that &quot;he had that
+dual sexuality without which the moral summits of humanity cannot be
+reached.&quot;</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_79'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_79'>[79]</a> Krupp caused much scandal by his life at Capri, where he was
+constantly surrounded by the handsome youths of the place, mandolinists
+and street arabs, with whom he was on familiar terms, and on whom he
+lavished money. H. D. Davray, a reliable eyewitness, has written &quot;Souvenirs
+sur M. Krupp &agrave; Capri,&quot; <i>L'Europ&eacute;en</i>, 29 November, 1902. It is not,
+however, definitely agreed that Krupp was of fully developed homosexual
+temperament (see, <i>e.g.</i>, <i>Jahrbuch f. sexuelle Zwischenstufen</i>, Bd. v, p.
+1303 <i>et seq.</i>) An account of his life at Capri was published in the
+<i>Vorw&auml;rts</i>, against which Krupp finally brought a libel action; but he
+died immediately afterward, it is widely believed, by his own hand, and
+the libel action was withdrawn.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_80'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_80'>[80]</a> Madame, the mother of the Regent, in her letters of 12th
+October, 4th November, and 13th December, 1701, repeatedly makes this
+assertion, and implies that it was supported by the English who at that
+time came over to Paris with the English Ambassador, Lord Portland. The
+King was very indifferent to women.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_81'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_81'>[81]</a> Anselm, Epistola lxii, in Migne's <i>Patrologia</i>, vol. clix,
+col. 95. John of Salisbury, in his <i>Polycrates</i>, describes the homosexual
+and effeminate habits of his time.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_82'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_82'>[82]</a> Pollock and Maitland, <i>History of English Law</i>, vol. ii, p.
+556.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_83'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_83'>[83]</a> Coleridge in his <i>Table Talk</i> (14 May, 1833) remarked: &quot;A
+man may, under certain states of the moral feeling, entertain something
+deserving the name of love towards a male object&mdash;an affection beyond
+friendship, and wholly aloof from appetite. In Elizabeth's and James's
+time it seems to have been almost fashionable to cherish such a feeling.
+Certainly the language of the two friends Musidorus and Pyrocles in the
+<i>Arcadia</i> is such as we could not use except to women.&quot; This passage of
+Coleridge's is interesting as an early English recognition by a
+distinguished man of genius of what may be termed ideal homosexuality.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_84'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_84'>[84]</a> See account of Udall in the <i>National Dictionary of
+Biography</i>.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_85'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_85'>[85]</a> <i>Complete Poems of Richard Barnfield</i>, edited with an
+introduction by A. B. Grosart, 1876. The poems of Barnfield were also
+edited by Arber, in the English Scholar's Library, 1883. Arber, who always
+felt much horror for the abnormal, argues that Barnfield's occupation with
+homosexual topics was merely due to a search for novelty, that it was &quot;for
+the most part but an amusement and had little serious or personal in it.&quot;
+Those readers of Barnfield, however, who are acquainted with homosexual
+literature will scarcely fail to recognize a personal preoccupation in his
+poems. This is also the opinion of Moll in his <i>Ber&uuml;hmte Homosexuelle</i>.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_86'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_86'>[86]</a> See appendix to my edition of Marlowe in the <i>Mermaid
+Series</i>, first edition. For a study of Marlowe's &quot;Gaveston,&quot; regarded as
+&quot;the hermaphrodite in soul,&quot; see J. A. Nicklin, <i>Free Review</i>, December,
+1895.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_87'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_87'>[87]</a> As Raffalovich acutely points out, the twentieth sonnet,
+with its reference to the &quot;one thing to my purpose nothing,&quot; is alone
+enough to show that Shakespeare was not a genuine invert, as then he would
+have found the virility of the loved object beautiful. His sonnets may
+fairly be compared to the <i>In Memoriam</i> of Tennyson, whom it is impossible
+to describe as inverted, though in his youth he cherished an ardent
+friendship for another youth, such as was also felt in youth by
+Montaigne.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_88'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_88'>[88]</a> A scene in Vanbrugh's <i>Relapse</i>, and the chapter (ch. li) in
+Smollett's <i>Roderick Random</i> describing Lord Strutwell, may also be
+mentioned as evidencing familiarity with inversion. &quot;In our country,&quot; said
+Lord Strutwell to Rawdon, putting forward arguments familiar to modern
+champions of homosexuality, &quot;it gains ground apace, and in all probability
+will become in a short time a more fashionable vice than simple
+fornication.&quot;</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_89'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_89'>[89]</a> These observations on eighteenth century homosexuality in
+London are chiefly based on the volumes of <i>Select Trials</i> at the Old
+Bailey, published in 1734.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_90'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_90'>[90]</a> Numa Praetorius (<i>Jahrbuch f&uuml;r sexuelle Zwischenstufen</i>, Bd.
+iv, p. 885), who has studied Byron from this point of view, considers
+that, though his biography has not yet been fully written on the sexual
+side, he was probably of bisexual temperament; Raffalovich (<i>Uranisme et
+Unisexualit&eacute;</i>, p. 309) is of the same opinion.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_91'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_91'>[91]</a> A youthful attraction of this kind in a poet is well
+illustrated by Dolben, who died at the age of nineteen. In addition to a
+passion for Greek poetry he cherished a romantic friendship of
+extraordinary ardor, revealed in his poems, for a slightly older
+schoolfellow, who was never even aware of the idolatry he aroused.
+Dolben's life has been written, and his poems edited, by his friend the
+eminent poet, Robert Bridges (<i>The Poems of D. M. Dolben</i>, edited with a
+Memoir by R. Bridges, 1911).</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_92'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_92'>[92]</a> A well-informed narrative of the Oscar Wilde trial is given
+by Raffalovich in his <i>Uranisme et Unisexualit&eacute;</i>, pp. 241-281; the full
+report of the trial has been published by Mason. The best life of Wilde is
+probably that of Arthur Ransome. Andr&eacute; Gide's little volume of
+reminiscences, <i>Oscar Wilde</i> (also translated into English), is well worth
+reading. Wilde has been discussed in relation to homosexuality by Numa
+Praetorius (<i>Jahrbuch f&uuml;r sexuelle Zwischenstufen</i>, vol. iii, 1901). An
+instructive document, an unpublished portion of <i>De Profundis</i>, in which
+Wilde sought to lay the blame for his misfortune on a friend,&mdash;his
+&quot;ancient affection&quot; for whom has, he declares, been turned to &quot;loathing,
+bitterness, and contempt,&quot;&mdash;was published in the <i>Times</i>, 18th April,
+1913; it clearly reveals an element of weakness of character.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_93'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_93'>[93]</a> T. Wright, <i>Life of Edward Fitzgerald</i>, vol. i, p. 158.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_94'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_94'>[94]</a> Most of these were carelessly lost or destroyed by Posh. A
+few have been published by James Blyth, <i>Edward Fitzgerald and</i> '<i>Posh</i>,'
+1908.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_95'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_95'>[95]</a> It is as such that Whitman should be approached, and I would
+desire to protest against the tendency, now marked in many quarters, to
+treat him merely as an invert, and to vilify him or glorify him
+accordingly. However important inversion may be as a psychological key to
+Whitman's personality, it plays but a small part in Whitman's work, and
+for many who care for that work a negligible part. (I may be allowed to
+refer to my own essay on Whitman, in <i>The New Spirit</i>, written nearly
+thirty years ago.)</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_96'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_96'>[96]</a> I may add that Symonds (in his book on Whitman) accepted
+this letter as a candid and final statement showing that Whitman was
+absolutely hostile to sexual inversion, that he had not even taken its
+phenomena into account, and that he had &quot;omitted to perceive that there
+are inevitable points of contact between sexual inversion and his doctrine
+of friendship.&quot; He recalls, however, Whitman's own lines at the end of
+&quot;Calamus&quot; in the Camden edition of 1876:&mdash;
+</p>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<span>&quot;Here my last words, and the most baffling,<br /></span>
+<span>Here the frailest leaves of me, and yet my strongest-lasting,<br /></span>
+<span>Here I shade down and hide my thoughts&mdash;I do not expose them,<br /></span>
+<span>And yet they expose me more than all my other poems.&quot;<br /></span>
+</div></div></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_97'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_97'>[97]</a> Whitman's letters to Peter Doyle, an uncultured young
+tram-conductor deeply loved by the poet, have been edited by Dr. Bucke,
+and published at Boston: <i>Calamus: A Series of Letters</i>, 1897.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_98'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_98'>[98]</a> Whitman acknowledged, however (as in the letter to Symonds
+already referred to), that he had had six children; they appear to have
+been born in the earlier part of his life when he lived in the South. (See
+a chapter on Walt Whitman's children in Edward Carpenter's interesting
+book, <i>Days with Walt Whitman</i>, 1906.) Yet his brother George Whitman
+said: &quot;I never knew Walt to fall in love with young girls, or even to show
+them marked attention.&quot; And Doyle, who knew him intimately during ten
+years of late life, said: &quot;Women in that sense never came into his head.&quot;
+The early heterosexual relationship seems to have been an exception in his
+life. With regard to the number of children I am informed that, in the
+opinion of a lady who knew Whitman in the South, there can be no
+reasonable doubt as to the existence of one child, but that when
+enumerating six he possibly included grandchildren.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_99'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_99'>[99]</a> While the homosexual strain in Walt Whitman has been more or
+less definitely admitted by various writers, the most vigorous attempts to
+present the homosexual character of his personality and work are due to
+Eduard Bertz in Germany, and to Dr. W. C. Rivers in England. Bertz has
+issued three publications on Whitman: see especially his <i>Der
+Yankee-Heiland</i>, 1906, and <i>Whitman-Mysterien</i>, 1907. The arguments of
+Rivers are concisely stated in a pamphlet entitled <i>Walt Whitman's
+Anomaly</i> (London: George Allen, 1913). Both Bertz and Rivers emphasize the
+feminine traits in Whitman. An interesting independent picture of Whitman,
+at about the date of the letter to Symonds, accompanied by the author's
+excellent original photographs, is furnished by Dr. John Johnston, <i>A
+Visit to Walt Whitman</i>, 1898. It may be added that, probably, both the
+extent and the significance of the feminine traits in Whitman have been
+overestimated by some writers. Most artists and men of genius have some
+feminine traits; they do not prove the existence of inversion, nor does
+their absence disprove it. Dr. Clark Bell writes to me in reference to the
+little book by Dr. Rivers: &quot;I knew Walt Whitman personally. To me Mr.
+Whitman was one of the most robust and virile of men, extraordinarily so.
+He was from my standpoint not feminine at all, but physically masculine
+and robust. The difficulty is that a virile and strong man who is poetic
+in temperament, ardent and tender, may have phases and moods of passion
+and emotion which are apt to be misinterpreted.&quot; A somewhat similar view,
+in opposition to Bertz and Rivers, has been vigorously set forth by
+Bazalgette (who has written a very thorough study of Whitman in French),
+especially in the <i>Mercure de France</i> for 1st July, 1st Oct., and 15th
+Nov., 1913.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_100'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_100'>[100]</a> Lepelletier, in what may be regarded as the official
+biography of Verlaine (<i>Paul Verlaine</i>, 1907) seeks to minimize or explain
+away the homosexual aspect of the poet's life. So also Berrichon,
+Rimbaud's brother-in-law, <i>Mercure de France</i>, 16 July, 1911 and 1 Feb.,
+1912. P. Escoube, in a judicious essay (included in <i>Pr&eacute;f&eacute;rences</i>, 1913),
+presents a more reasonable view of this aspect of Verlaine's temperament.
+Even apart altogether from the evidence as to the poet's tendency to
+passionate friendship, there can be no appeal from the poems themselves,
+which clearly possess an absolute and unquestionable sincerity.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_101'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_101'>[101]</a> Sir Richard Burton, who helped to popularize this view,
+regarded the phenomenon as &quot;geographical and climatic, not racial,&quot; and
+held that within what he called the Sotadic Zone &quot;the vice is popular and
+endemic, held at the worst to be a mere peccadillo, while the races to the
+north and south of the limits here defined practice it only sporadically,
+amid the opprobrium of their fellows, who, as a rule, are physically
+incapable of performing the operation, and look upon it with the liveliest
+disgust.&quot; He adds: &quot;The only physical cause for the practice which
+suggests itself to me, and that must be owned to be purely conjectural, is
+that within the Sotadic Zone there is a blending of the masculine and
+feminine temperaments, a crasis which elsewhere only occurs sporadically&quot;
+(<i>Arabian Nights</i>, 1885, vol. x, pp. 205-254). The theory of the Sotadic
+Zone fails to account for the custom among the Normans, Celts, Scythians,
+Bulgars, and Tartars, and, moreover, in various of these regions different
+views have prevailed at different periods. Burton was wholly unacquainted
+with the psychological investigations into sexual inversion which had,
+indeed, scarcely begun in his day.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_102'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_102'>[102]</a> Spectator (<i>Anthropophyteia</i>, vol. vii, 1910), referring
+especially to the neighborhood of Sorrento, states that the southern
+Italians regard passive <i>pedicatio</i> as disgraceful, but attach little or
+no shame to active <i>pedicatio</i>. This indifference enables them to exploit
+the homosexual foreigners who are specially attracted to southern Italy in
+the development of a flourishing homosexual industry.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_103'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_103'>[103]</a> It is true that in the solitude of great modern cities it
+is possible for small homosexual coteries to form, in a certain sense, an
+environment of their own, favorable to their abnormality; yet this fact
+hardly modifies the general statement made in the text.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_104'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_104'>[104]</a> See especially Hirschfeld, <i>Die Homosexualit&auml;t</i>, chs. xxiv
+and xxv.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_105'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_105'>[105]</a> Ulrichs, in his <i>Argonauticus</i>, in 1869, estimated the
+number as only 25,000, but admitted that this was probably a decided
+underestimate. Bloch (<i>Die Prostitution</i>, Bd. i, p. 792) has found reason
+to believe that in Cologne in the fifteenth century the percentage was
+nearly as high as Hirschfeld finds it today. A few years earlier Bloch had
+believed (<i>Beitr&auml;ge</i>, part i, p. 215, 1902) that Hirschfeld's estimate of
+2 per cent, was &quot;sheer nonsense.&quot;</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_106'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_106'>[106]</a> Hirschfeld mentions the case of two men, artists, one of
+them married, who were intimate friends for a great many years before each
+discovered that the other was an invert.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_107'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_107'>[107]</a> See articles by Numa Praetorius and Fernan, maintaining
+that homosexuality is at least as frequent in France (<i>Sexual-Probleme</i>,
+March and December, 1909).</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_108'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_108'>[108]</a> Dr. Laupts, <i>L'Homosexualit&eacute;</i>, 1910, pp. 413, 420.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_109'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_109'>[109]</a> N&auml;cke, <i>Zeitschrift f&uuml;r Sexualwissenschaft</i>, 1908, Heft 6.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_110'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_110'>[110]</a> It is a fact significant of the French attitude toward
+homosexuality that the psychologist, Dr. Saint-Paul, when writing a book
+on this subject, though in a completely normal and correct manner, thought
+it desirable to adopt a pseudonym.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_111'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_111'>[111]</a> A well-informed series of papers dealing with English
+homosexuality generally, and especially with London (L. Pavia, &quot;Die
+m&auml;nnliche Homosexualit&auml;t in England,&quot; <i>Vierteljahrsberichte des
+wissenschaftlich-humanit&auml;ren Komitees</i>, 1909-1911) will be found
+instructive even by those who are familiar with London. And see also
+Hirschfeld, <i>Die Homosexualit&auml;t</i>, ch. xxvi. Much information of historical
+nature concerning homosexuality in England will be found in Eugen D&uuml;hren
+(Iwan Bloch), <i>Das Geschlechtsleben in England</i>.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_112'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_112'>[112]</a> This: is doubtless the reason why so many English inverts
+establish themselves outside England. Paris, Florence, Nice, Naples,
+Cairo, and other places, are said to swarm with homosexual Englishmen.</p></div>
+
+
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<h3><a name='2_CHAPTER_II'></a><a name='2_Page_65'></a>CHAPTER II.&mdash;THE STUDY OF SEXUAL INVERSION.</h3>
+
+<div class='blkquot'><p>Westphal&mdash;H&ouml;ssli&mdash;Casper&mdash;Ulrichs&mdash;Krafft-Ebing&mdash;Moll&mdash;F&eacute;r&eacute;&mdash;Kiernan&mdash;Lydston&mdash;Raffalovich&mdash;Edward
+Carpenter&mdash;Hirschfeld.</p></div>
+
+<p>Westphal, an eminent professor of psychiatry at Berlin, may be said to be
+the first to put the study of sexual inversion on an assured scientific
+basis. In 1870 he published, in the <i>Archiv f&uuml;r Psychiatrie</i>, of which he
+was for many years editor, the detailed history of a young woman who, from
+her earliest years, differed from other girls: she liked to dress as a
+boy, only cared for boys' games, and as she grew up was sexually attracted
+only to women, with whom she formed a series of tender relationships, in
+which the friends obtained sexual gratification by mutual caresses; while
+she blushed and was shy in the presence of women, more especially the girl
+with whom she chanced to be in love, she was always absolutely indifferent
+in the presence of men. Westphal&mdash;a pupil, it may be noted, of Griesinger,
+who had already called attention to the high character sometimes shown by
+subjects of this perversion&mdash;combined keen scientific insight with a rare
+degree of personal sympathy for those who came under his care, and it was
+this combination of qualities which enabled him to grasp the true nature
+of a case such as this, which by most medical men at that time would have
+been hastily dismissed as a vulgar instance of vice or insanity. Westphal
+perceived that this abnormality was congenital, not acquired, so that it
+could not be termed vice; and, while he insisted on the presence of
+neurotic elements, his observations showed the absence of anything that
+could legitimately be termed insanity. He gave to this condition the name
+of &quot;contrary sexual feeling&quot; (<i>Kontr&auml;re Sexualempfindung</i>), by which it
+was long usually known in Germany. The way was thus made clear for the
+rapid progress of our knowledge of this abnormality. New cases were
+<a name='2_Page_66'></a>published in quick succession, at first exclusively in Germany, and more
+especially in Westphal's <i>Archiv</i>, but soon in other countries also,
+chiefly Italy and France.<a name='2_FNanchor_113'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_113'><sup>[113]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>While Westphal was the first to place the study of sexual inversion on a
+progressive footing, many persons had previously obtained glimpses into
+the subject. Thus, in 1791, two cases were published<a name='2_FNanchor_114'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_114'><sup>[114]</sup></a> of men who
+showed a typical emotional attraction to their own sex, though it was not
+quite clearly made out that the inversion was congenital. In 1836, again,
+a Swiss writer, Heinrich H&ouml;ssli, published a rather diffuse but remarkable
+work, entitled <i>Eros</i>, which contained much material of a literary
+character bearing on this matter. He seems to have been moved to write
+this book by a trial which had excited considerable attention at that
+time. A man of good position had suddenly murdered a youth, and was
+executed for the crime, which, according to H&ouml;ssli, was due to homosexual
+love and jealousy. H&ouml;ssli was not a trained scholar; he was in business at
+Glarus as a skillful milliner, the most successful in the town. His own
+temperament is supposed to have been bisexual. His book was prohibited by
+the local authorities and at a later period the entire remaining stock was
+destroyed in a fire, so that its circulation was very small. It is now,
+however, regarded by some as the first serious attempt to deal with the
+problem of homosexuality since Plato's <i>Banquet</i>.<a name='2_FNanchor_115'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_115'><sup>[115]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>Some years later, in 1852, Casper, the chief medico-legal authority of his
+time in Germany,&mdash;for it is in Germany that the foundations of the study
+of sexual inversion have been laid,&mdash;pointed out in Casper's
+<i>Vierteljahrsschrift</i> that pederasty, in a broad sense of the word, was
+sometimes a kind of &quot;moral <a name='2_Page_67'></a>hermaphroditism,&quot; due to a congenital psychic
+condition, and also that it by no means necessarily involved sodomy
+(<i>immissio penis in anum</i>). Casper brought forward a considerable amount
+of valuable evidence concerning these cardinal points, which he was the
+first to note,<a name='2_FNanchor_116'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_116'><sup>[116]</sup></a> but he failed to realize the full significance of his
+observations, and they had no immediate influence, though Tardieu, in
+1858, admitted a congenital element in some pederasts.</p>
+
+<p>The man, however, who more than anyone else brought to light the phenomena
+of sexual inversion had not been concerned either with the medical or the
+criminal aspects of the matter. Karl Heinrich Ulrichs (born in 1825 near
+Aurich), who for many years expounded and defended homosexual love, and
+whose views are said to have had some influence in drawing Westphal's
+attention to the matter, was a Hanoverian legal official (<i>Amtsassessor</i>),
+himself sexually inverted. From 1864 onward, at first under the name of
+&quot;Numa Numantius&quot; and subsequently under his own name, Ulrichs published,
+in various parts of Germany, a long series of works dealing with this
+question, and made various attempts to obtain a revision of the legal
+position of the sexual invert in Germany.</p>
+
+<p>Although not a writer whose psychological views can carry much scientific
+weight, Ulrichs appears to have been a man of most brilliant ability, and
+his knowledge is said to have been of almost universal extent; he was not
+only well versed in his own special subjects of jurisprudence and
+theology, but in many branches of natural science, as well as in
+archeology; he was also regarded by many as the best Latinist of his time.
+In 1880 <a name='2_Page_68'></a>he left Germany and settled in Naples, and afterward at Aquila in
+the Abruzzi, whence he issued a Latin periodical. He died in 1895.<a name='2_FNanchor_117'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_117'><sup>[117]</sup></a>
+John Addington Symonds, who went to Aquila in 1891, wrote: &quot;Ulrichs is
+<i>chrysostomos</i> to the last degree, sweet, noble, a true gentleman and man
+of genius. He must have been at one time a man of singular personal
+distinction, so finely cut are his features, and so grand the lines of his
+skull.&quot;<a name='2_FNanchor_118'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_118'><sup>[118]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>For many years Ulrichs was alone in his efforts to gain scientific
+recognition for congenital homosexuality. He devised (with allusion to
+Uranos in Plato's <i>Symposium</i>) the word uranian or urning, ever since
+frequently used for the homosexual lover, while he called the normal
+heterosexual lover a dioning (from Dione). He regarded uranism, or
+homosexual love, as a congenital abnormality by which a female soul had
+become united with a male body&mdash;<i>anima muliebris in corpore virili
+inclusa</i>&mdash;and his theoretical speculations have formed the starting point
+for many similar speculations. His writings are remarkable in various
+respects, although, on account of the polemical warmth with which, as one
+pleading <i>pro domo</i>, he argued his cause, they had no marked influence on
+scientific thought.<a name='2_FNanchor_119'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_119'><sup>[119]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>This privilege was reserved for Westphal. After he had shown the way and
+thrown open his journal for their publication, new cases appeared in rapid
+succession. In Italy, also, Ritti, Tamassia, Lombroso, and others began to
+study these phenomena. In 1882 Charcot and Magnan published in the
+<i>Archives de Neurologie</i> the first important study which appeared in
+France concerning sexual inversion and allied sexual perversions. They
+regarded sexual inversion as an episode (<i>syndrome</i>) in a more fundamental
+process of hereditary degeneration, and compared it with such morbid
+obsessions as dipsomania and <a name='2_Page_69'></a>kleptomania. From a somewhat more
+medico-legal standpoint, the study of sexual inversion in France was
+furthered by Brouardel, and still more by Lacassagne, whose stimulating
+influence at Lyons has produced fruitful results in the work of many
+pupils.<a name='2_FNanchor_120'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_120'><sup>[120]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>Of much more importance in the history of the theory of sexual inversion
+was the work of Richard von Krafft-Ebing (born at Mannheim in 1840 and
+died at Graz in 1902), for many years professor of psychiatry at Vienna
+University and one of the most distinguished alienists of his time. While
+active in all departments of psychiatry and author of a famous textbook,
+from 1877 onward he took special interest in the pathology of the sexual
+impulse. His <i>Psychopathia Sexualis</i> contained over two hundred histories,
+not only of sexual inversion but of all other forms of sexual perversion.
+For many years it was the only book on the subject and it long remained
+the chief storehouse of facts. It passed through many editions and was
+translated into many languages (there are two translations in English),
+enjoying an immense and not altogether enviable vogue.</p>
+
+<p>Krafft-Ebing's methods were open to some objection. His mind was not of a
+severely critical order. He poured out the new and ever-enlarged editions
+of his book with extraordinary rapidity, sometimes remodelling them. He
+introduced new subdivisions from time to time into his classification of
+sexual perversions, and, although this rather fine-spun classification has
+doubtless contributed to give precision to the subject and to advance its
+scientific study, it was at no time generally accepted. Krafft-Ebing's
+great service lay in the clinical enthusiasm with which he approached the
+study of sexual perversions. With the firm conviction that he was
+conquering a great neglected field of morbid psychology which rightly
+belongs to the physician, he <a name='2_Page_70'></a>accumulated without any false shame a vast
+mass of detailed histories, and his reputation induced sexually abnormal
+individuals in all directions to send him their autobiographies, in the
+desire to benefit their fellow-sufferers.</p>
+
+<p>It is as a clinician, rather than as a psychologist, that we must regard
+Krafft-Ebing. At the outset he considered inversion to be a functional
+sign of degeneration, a partial manifestation of a neuropathic and
+psychopathic state which is in most cases hereditary. This perverse
+sexuality appears spontaneously with the developing sexual life, without
+external causes, as the individual manifestation of an abnormal
+modification of the <i>vita sexualis</i>, and must then be regarded as
+congenital; or it develops as a result of special injurious influences
+working on a sexuality which had at first been normal, and must then be
+regarded as acquired. Careful investigation of these so-called acquired
+cases, however, Krafft-Ebing in the end finally believed, would indicate
+that the predisposition consists in a latent homosexuality, or at least
+bisexuality, which requires for its manifestation the operation of
+accidental causes. In the last edition of his work Krafft-Ebing was
+inclined to regard inversion as being not so much a degeneration as a
+variation, a simple anomaly, and acknowledged that his opinion thus
+approximated to that which had long been held by inverts themselves.<a name='2_FNanchor_121'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_121'><sup>[121]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>At the time of his death, Krafft-Ebing, who had begun by accepting the
+view, at that time prevalent among alienists, that homosexuality is a sign
+of degeneration, thus fully adopted and set the seal of his authority on
+the view, already expressed alike by some scientific investigators as well
+as by inverts themselves, that sexual inversion is to be regarded simply
+as an anomaly, whatever difference of opinion there might be as to the
+value of the anomaly. The way was even opened for such a view as that of
+Freud and most of the psychoanalysts today who regard a strain of
+homosexuality as normal and almost <a name='2_Page_71'></a>constant, with a profound significance
+for the psychonervous life. In 1891 Dr. Albert Moll, of Berlin, published
+his work, <i>Die Kontr&auml;re Sexualempfindung</i>, which subsequently appeared in
+much enlarged and revised editions. It speedily superseded all previous
+books as a complete statement and judicious discussion of sexual
+inversion. Moll was not content merely to present fresh clinical material.
+He attacked the problem which had now become of primary importance: the
+nature and causes of sexual inversion. He discussed the phenomena as a
+psychologist even more than as a physician, bearing in mind the broader
+aspects of the problem, keenly critical of accepted opinions, but
+judiciously cautious in the statement of conclusions. He cleared away
+various ancient prejudices and superstitions which even Krafft-Ebing
+sometimes incautiously repeated. He accepted the generally received
+doctrine that the sexually inverted usually belong to families in which
+various nervous and mental disorders prevail, but he pointed out at the
+same time that it is not in all cases possible to prove that we are
+concerned with individuals possessing a hereditary neurotic taint. He also
+rejected any minute classification of sexual inverts, only recognizing
+psycho-sexual hermaphroditism and homosexuality. At the same time he cast
+doubt on the existence of acquired homosexuality, in a strict sense,
+except in occasional cases, and he pointed out that even when a normal
+heterosexual impulse appears at puberty, and a homosexual impulse later,
+it may still be the former that was acquired and the latter that was
+inborn.</p>
+
+<p>In America attention had been given to the phenomena at a fairly early
+period. Mention may be specially made of J. G. Kiernan and G. Frank
+Lydston, both of whom put forward convenient classifications of homosexual
+manifestations some thirty years ago.<a name='2_FNanchor_122'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_122'><sup>[122]</sup></a> More recently (1911) an
+American writer, under the pseudonym of Xavier Mayne, privately printed an
+extensive work entitled <i>The Intersexes: A History of Similisexualism as
+<a name='2_Page_72'></a>a Problem in Social Life</i>, popularly written and compiled from many
+sources. This book, from a subjective and scarcely scientific standpoint,
+claims that homosexual relationships are natural, necessary, and
+legitimate.<a name='2_FNanchor_123'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_123'><sup>[123]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>In England the first attempts to deal seriously, from the modern point of
+view, with the problem of homosexuality came late, and were either
+published privately or abroad. In 1883 John Addington Symonds privately
+printed his discussion of <i>paiderastia</i> in ancient Greece, under the title
+of <i>A Problem in Greek Ethics</i>, and in 1889-1890 he further wrote, and in
+1891 privately printed, <i>A Problem of Modern Ethics: Being an Enquiry into
+the Phenomena of Sexual Inversion</i>. In 1886 Sir Richard Burton added to
+his translation of the <i>Arabian Nights</i> a Terminal Essay on the same
+subject. In 1894 Edward Carpenter privately printed in Manchester a
+pamphlet entitled <i>Homogenic Love</i>, in which he criticised various
+psychiatric views of inversion at that time current, and claimed that the
+laws of homosexual love are the same as those of heterosexual love,
+urging, however, that the former possesses a special aptitude to be
+exalted to a higher and more spiritual level of comradeship, so fulfilling
+a beneficent social function. More recently (1907) Edward Carpenter
+published a volume of papers on homosexuality and its problems, under the
+title of <i>The Intermediate Sex</i>, and later (1914) a more special study of
+the invert in early religion and in warfare, <i>Intermediate Types among
+Primitive Folk</i>.</p>
+
+<p>In 1896 the most comprehensive book so far written on the subject in
+England was published in French by Mr. Andr&eacute; Raffalovich (in Lacassagne's
+<i>Biblioth&egrave;que de Criminologie</i>), <i>Uranisme et Unisexualit&eacute;</i>. This book
+dealt chiefly with congenital inversion, publishing no new cases, but
+revealing a wide knowledge of the matter. Raffalovich put forward many
+just and sagacious reflections on the nature and treatment of inversion,
+<a name='2_Page_73'></a>and the attitude of society toward perverted sexuality. The historical
+portions of the book, which are of special interest, deal largely with the
+remarkable prevalence of inversion in England, neglected by previous
+investigators. Raffalovich, whose attitude is, on the whole, philosophical
+rather than scientific, regards congenital inversion as a large and
+inevitable factor in human life, but, taking the Catholic standpoint, he
+condemns all sexuality, either heterosexual or homosexual, and urges the
+invert to restrain the physical manifestations of his instinct and to aim
+at an ideal of chastity. On the whole, it may be said that the book is the
+work of a thinker who has reached his own results in his own way, and
+those results bear an imprint of originality and freedom from tradition.</p>
+
+<p>In recent years no one has so largely contributed to place our knowledge
+of sexual inversion on a broad and accurate basis as Dr. Magnus Hirschfeld
+of Berlin, who possesses an unequalled acquaintance with the phenomena of
+homosexuality in all their aspects. He has studied the matter exhaustively
+in Germany and to some extent in other countries also; he has received the
+histories of a thousand inverts; he is said to have met over ten thousand
+homosexual persons. As editor of the <i>Jahrbuch f&uuml;r sexuelle
+Zwischenstufen</i>, which he established in 1899, and author of various
+important monographs&mdash;more especially on transitional psychic and physical
+stages between masculinity and femininity&mdash;Hirschfeld had already
+contributed greatly to the progress of investigation in this field before
+the appearance in 1914 of his great work, <i>Die Homosexualit&auml;t des Mannes
+und des Weibes</i>. This is not only the largest but the most precise,
+detailed, and comprehensive&mdash;even the most condensed&mdash;work which has yet
+appeared on the subject. It is, indeed, an encyclopedia of homosexuality.
+For such a task Hirschfeld had been prepared by many years of strenuous
+activity as a physician, an investigator, a medico-legal expert before the
+courts, and his position as president of the <i>Wissenschaftlich-humanit&auml;ren
+Komitee</i> which is concerned with the defense of the interests of the
+homosexual in Germany. In Hirschfeld's book the pathological <a name='2_Page_74'></a>conception
+of inversion has entirely disappeared; homosexuality is regarded as
+primarily a biological phenomenon of universal extension, and secondarily
+as a social phenomenon of serious importance. There is no attempt to
+invent new theories; the main value of Hirschfeld's work lies, indeed, in
+the constant endeavor to keep close to definite facts. It is this quality
+which renders the book an indispensable source for all who seek
+enlightened and precise information on this question.</p>
+
+<p>Even the existence of such a treatise as this of Hirschfeld's is enough to
+show how rapidly the study of this subject has grown. A few years ago&mdash;for
+instance, when Dr. Paul Moreau wrote his <i>Aberrations du Sens
+G&eacute;n&eacute;sique</i>&mdash;sexual inversion was scarcely even a name. It was a loathsome
+and nameless vice, only to be touched with a pair of tongs, rapidly and
+with precautions. As it now presents itself, it is a psychological and
+medico-legal problem so full of interest that we need not fear to face it,
+and so full of grave social actuality that we are bound to face it.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_113'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_113'>[113]</a> In England aberration of the sexual instinct, or the
+tendency of men to feminine occupations and of women to masculine
+occupations, had been referred to in the <i>Medical Times and Gazette</i>,
+February 9, 1867; Sir G. Savage first described a case of &quot;Sexual
+Perversion&quot; in the <i>Journal of Mental Science</i>, vol. xxx, October, 1884.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_114'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_114'>[114]</a> Moritz, <i>Magazin f&uuml;r Erfahrungsseelenkunde</i>, Berlin, Bd.
+viii.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_115'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_115'>[115]</a> A full and interesting account of H&ouml;ssli and his book is
+given by Karsch in the <i>Jahrbuch f&uuml;r sexuelle Zwischenstufen</i>, Bd. v,
+1903, pp. 449-556.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_116'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_116'>[116]</a> &quot;Eugen D&uuml;hren&quot; (Iwan Bloch) remarks, however (<i>Neue
+Forschungen &uuml;ber den Marquis de Sade und seine Zeit</i>, p. 436), that de
+Sade in his <i>Aline et Valcour</i> seems to recognize that inversion is
+sometimes inborn, or at least natural, and apt to develop at a very early
+age, in spite of all provocations to the normal attitude. &quot;And if this
+inclination were not natural,&quot; he makes Sarmiento say, &quot;would the
+impression of it be received in childhood?... Let us study better this
+indulgent Nature before daring to fix her limits.&quot; Still earlier, in 1676
+(as Schouten has pointed out, <i>Sexual-Probleme</i>, January, 1910, p. 66), an
+Italian priest called Carretto recognized that homosexual tendencies are
+innate.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_117'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_117'>[117]</a> For some account of Ulrichs see <i>Jahrbuch f&uuml;r sexuelle
+Zwischenstufen</i>, Bd. i, 1899, p. 36.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_118'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_118'>[118]</a> Horatio Brown, <i>John Addington Symonds, a Biography</i>, vol.
+ii, p. 344.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_119'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_119'>[119]</a> Ulrichs scarcely went so far as to assert that both
+homosexual and heterosexual love are equally normal and healthy; this has,
+however, been argued more recently.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_120'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_120'>[120]</a> Special mention may be made of <i>L'Inversion Sexuelle</i>, a
+copious and comprehensive, though sometimes uncritical book by Dr. J.
+Chevalier, published in 1893, and the <i>Perversion et Perversit&eacute; Sexuelles</i>
+of Dr. Saint-Paul, writing under the pseudonym of &quot;Dr. Laupts,&quot; published
+in 1896 and republished in an enlarged form, under the title of
+<i>L'Homosexualit&eacute; et les Types Homosexuels</i>, in 1910.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_121'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_121'>[121]</a> Krafft-Ebing set forth his latest views in a paper read
+before the International Medical Congress, at Paris, in 1900
+(<i>Comptes-rendus</i>, &quot;Section de Psychiatrie,&quot; pp. 421, 462; also in
+contributions to the <i>Jahrbuch f&uuml;r sexuelle Zwischenstufen</i>, Bd. iii,
+1901).</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_122'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_122'>[122]</a> Kiernan, <i>Detroit Lancet</i>, 1884, <i>Alienist and
+Neurologist</i>, April, 1891; Lydston, <i>Philadelphia Medical and Surgical
+Reporter</i>, September 7, 1889, and <i>Addresses and Essays</i>, 1892.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_123'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_123'>[123]</a> A summary of the conclusion of this book, of which but few
+copies were printed, will be found in Hirschfeld's <i>Vierteljahrsberichte</i>,
+October, 1911, pp. 78-91.</p></div>
+
+
+
+<hr class="full" />
+<h3><a name='2_CHAPTER_III'></a><a name='2_Page_75'></a>CHAPTER III.&mdash;SEXUAL INVERSION IN MEN.</h3>
+
+<div class='blkquot'><p>Relatively Undifferentiated State of the Sexual Impulse in Early Life&mdash;The
+Freudian View&mdash;Homosexuality in Schools&mdash;The Question of Acquired
+Homosexuality&mdash;Latent Inversion&mdash;Retarded Inversion&mdash;Bisexuality&mdash;The
+Question of the Invert's Truthfulness&mdash;Histories.</p></div>
+
+<p>When the sexual instinct first appears in early youth, it is much less
+specialized than normally it becomes later. Not only is it, at the outset,
+less definitely directed to a specific sexual end, but even the sex of its
+object is sometimes uncertain.<a name='2_FNanchor_124'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_124'><sup>[124]</sup></a> This has always been so well
+recognized that those in authority over young men have sometimes forced
+women upon them to avoid the risk of possible unnatural offenses.<a name='2_FNanchor_125'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_125'><sup>[125]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>The institution which presents these phenomena to us in the most marked
+and the most important manner is, naturally, the school, in England
+especially the Public School. In France, where the same phenomena are
+noted, Tarde called attention to these relationships, &quot;most usually
+Platonic in the primitive meaning of the word, which indicate a simple
+indecision of frontier between friendship and love, still undifferentiated
+in the dawn of the awakening heart,&quot; and he regretted that no one had
+studied them. In England we are very familiar with <a name='2_Page_76'></a>vague allusions to the
+vices of public schools. From time to time we read letters in the
+newspapers denouncing public schools as &quot;hot-beds of vice&quot; and one
+anonymous writer remarks that &quot;some of our public schools almost provoke
+the punishment of the cities of the Plain.&quot;<a name='2_FNanchor_126'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_126'><sup>[126]</sup></a> But these allegations are
+rarely or never submitted to accurate investigation. The physicians and
+masters of public schools who are in a position to study the matter
+usually possess no psychological training, and appear to view
+homosexuality with too much disgust to care to pay any careful attention
+to it. What knowledge they possess they keep to themselves, for it is
+considered to be in the interests of public schools that these things
+should be hushed up. When anything very scandalous occurs one or two lads
+are expelled, to their own grave and, perhaps, lifelong injury, and
+without benefit to those who remain, whose awakening sexual life rarely
+receives intelligent sympathy.</p>
+
+<div class='blkquot'><p>In several of the Histories which follow in this chapter, as well
+ as in Histories contained in other volumes of these <i>Studies</i>,
+ details will be found concerning homosexuality as it occurs in
+ English schools, public or private. (See also the study
+ &quot;Auto-erotism&quot; in vol. i.) The prevalence of homosexual and
+ erotic phenomena in schools varies greatly at different schools
+ and at different times in the same school, while in small private
+ schools such phenomena may be entirely unknown. As an English
+ schoolboy I never myself saw or heard anything of such practices,
+ and in Germany, Professor Gurlitt (<i>Die Neue Generation</i>,
+ January, 1909), among others, testifies to similar absence of
+ experience during his whole school life, although there was much
+ talk and joking among the boys over sexual things. I have added
+ some observations by a correspondent whose experiences of English
+ public school life are still recent:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p> &quot;In the years I was a member of a public school, I saw and heard
+ a good deal of homosexuality, though till my last two years I did
+ not understand its meaning. As a prefect, I discussed with other
+ prefects the methods of checking it, and of punishing it when
+ detected. My own observations, supported by those of others, led
+ me to think that the fault of the usual method of dealing with
+ homosexuality in schools is that it regards all school
+ homosexualists as being in one class together, <a name='2_Page_77'></a>and has only one
+ way of dealing with them&mdash;the birch for a first offense,
+ expulsion for a second. Now, I think we may distinguish <i>three</i>
+ classes of school homosexualists:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p> &quot;(a) A very small number who are probably radically inverted, and
+ who do not scruple to sacrifice young and innocent boys to their
+ passions. These, and these only, are a real moral danger to
+ others, and I believe them to be rare.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;(b) Boys of various ages who, having been initiated into the
+ passive part in their young days, continue practices of an active
+ or passive kind; but only with boys already known to be
+ homosexualists; they draw the line at corrupting fresh victims.
+ This class realize more or less what they are about, but cannot
+ be called a danger to the morals of pure boys.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;(c) Young boys who, whether in the development of their own
+ physical nature, or by the instruction of older boys of the class
+ (a), find out the pleasures of masturbation or intercrural
+ connection. (I never heard of a case of <i>pedicatio</i> at my school,
+ and only once of <i>fellatio</i>, which was attempted on a quite young
+ boy, who complained to his house master, and the offender was
+ expelled). Boys in this class have probably little or no idea of
+ what sexual morality means, and can hardly be accused of a
+ <i>moral</i> offense at all.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I submit that these three classes should receive quite different
+ treatment. Expulsion may occasionally be necessary for class (a),
+ but the few who belong to this class are usually too cunning to
+ get caught. It used to be notorious at school that it was almost
+ always the wrong people who got dropped on. I do not think a boy
+ in the other two classes should ever be expelled, and even when
+ expulsion is unavoidable, it should, if possible, be deferred
+ till the end of the term, so as to make it indistinguishable from
+ an ordinary departure. After all, there is no reason to ruin a
+ boy's prospects because he is a little beast at sixteen; there
+ are very few hopeless incorrigibles at that age.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;As regards the other two classes, I should begin by giving boys
+ very much fuller enlightenment on sexual subjects than is usually
+ done, before they go to a public school at all. Either a boy is
+ pitchforked into the place in utter innocence and ignorance, and
+ yields to temptations to do things which he vaguely, if at all,
+ realizes are wrong, and that only because a puzzling sort of
+ instinct tells him so; or else he is given just enough
+ information to whet his curiosity, usually in the shape of
+ warnings against certain apparently harmless bodily acts, which
+ he not unnaturally tries out of curiosity, and finds them very
+ pleasant. It may be undesirable that a boy should have full
+ knowledge, at the time he goes to school, but it is more
+ undesirable that he should go with a burning curiosity, or a
+ total ignorance on the subject. I am <a name='2_Page_78'></a>convinced that much might
+ be done in the way of prevention if boys were told more, and
+ allowed to be <i>open</i>. Much of the pleasure of sexual talk among
+ boys I believe to be due to the spurious interest aroused by the
+ fact that it is forbidden fruit, and involves risk if caught. It
+ seems to me that frankness is far more moral than suggestion. I
+ would not 'expurgate' school editions of great authors; the frank
+ obscenity of parts of Shakespeare is far less immoral than the
+ prurient prudishness which declines to print it, but numbers the
+ lines in such a way that the boy can go home and look up the
+ omitted passage in a complete edition, with a distinct sense of
+ guilt, which is where the harm comes in.&quot;</p>
+
+<p> It is probable that only a small proportion of homosexual boys in
+ schools can properly be described as &quot;vicious.&quot; A. Hoche,
+ describing homosexuality in German schools (&quot;Z&uuml;r Frage der
+ forensischen Beurteilung sexuellen Vergehen,&quot; <i>Neurologisches
+ Centralblatt</i>, 1896, No. 2), and putting together communications
+ received from various medical men regarding their own youthful
+ experiences at school, finds relationships of the kind very
+ common, usually between boys of different ages and
+ school-classes. According to one observer, the feminine, or
+ passive, part was always played by a boy of girlish form and
+ complexion, and the relationships were somewhat like those of
+ normal lovers, with kissing, poems, love-letters, scenes of
+ jealousy, sometimes visits to each other in bed, but without
+ masturbation, pederasty, or other grossly physical
+ manifestations. From his own youthful experience Hoche records
+ precisely similar observations, and remarks that the lovers were
+ by no means recruited from the vicious elements in the school.
+ (The elder scholars, of 21 or 22 years of age, formed regular
+ sexual relationships with the servant-girls in the house.) It is
+ probable that the homosexual relationships in English schools
+ are, as a rule, not more vicious than those described by Hoche,
+ but that the concealment in which they are wrapped leads to
+ exaggeration. In the course of a discussion on this matter over
+ thirty years ago, &quot;Olim Etoniensis&quot; wrote (<i>Journal of
+ Education</i>, 1882, p. 85) that, on making a list of the vicious
+ boys he had known at Eton, he found that &quot;these very boys had
+ become cabinet ministers, statesmen, officers, clergymen,
+ country-gentlemen, etc., and that they are nearly all of them
+ fathers of thriving families, respected and prosperous.&quot; But, as
+ Marro has remarked, the question is not thus settled. Public
+ distinction by no means necessarily implies any fine degree of
+ private morality.</p>
+
+<p> Sometimes the manifestations thus appearing in schools or
+ wherever youths are congregated together are not truly
+ homosexual, but exhibit a more or less brutal or even sadistic
+ perversion of the immature sexual instinct. This may be
+ illustrated by the following narrative concerning <a name='2_Page_79'></a>a large London
+ city warehouse: &quot;A youth left my class at the age of 16&frac12;,&quot; writes
+ a correspondent, &quot;to take up an apprenticeship in a large
+ wholesale firm in G&mdash;&mdash; Street. Fortunately he went on probation
+ of three weeks before articling. He came to me at the end of the
+ first week asking me to intercede with his mother (he had no
+ father) not to let him return. He told me that almost nightly,
+ and especially when new fellows came, the youths in his dormitory
+ (eleven in number) would waylay him, hold him down, and rub his
+ parts to the tune of some comic song or dance-music. The boy who
+ could choose the fastest time had the privilege of performing the
+ operation, and most had to be the victim in turn unless new boys
+ entered, when they would sometimes be subjected to this for a
+ week. This boy, having been brought up strictly, was shocked,
+ dazed, and alarmed; but they stopped him from calling out, and he
+ dared not report it. Most boys entered direct on their
+ apprenticeship without probation, and had no chance to get out. I
+ procured the boy's release from the place and gave the manager to
+ understand what went on.&quot; In such a case as this it has usually
+ happened that a strong boy of brutal and perverse instincts and
+ some force of character initiates proceedings which the others
+ either fall into with complacency or are too weak to resist. </p></div>
+
+<p>Max Dessoir<a name='2_FNanchor_127'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_127'><sup>[127]</sup></a> came to the conclusion that &quot;an undifferentiated sexual
+feeling is normal, on the average, during the first years of
+puberty,&mdash;<i>i.e.</i>, from 13 to 15 in boys and from 12 to 14 in girls,&mdash;while
+in later years it must be regarded as pathological.&quot; He added very truly
+that in this early period the sexual emotion has not become centered in
+the sexual organs. This latter fact is certainly far too often forgotten
+by grown-up persons who suspect the idealized passion of boys and girls of
+a physical side which children have often no suspicion of, and would view
+with repulsion and horror. How far the sexual instinct may be said to be
+undifferentiated in early puberty as regards sex is a little doubtful. It
+is comparatively undifferentiated, but except in rare cases it is not
+absolutely undifferentiated.</p>
+
+<p>We have to admit, however, that, in the opinion of the latest
+physiologists of sex, such as Castle, Heape, and Marshall, each sex
+contains the latent characters of the other or recessive sex. Each sex is
+latent in the other, and each, as it contains the <a name='2_Page_80'></a>characters of both
+sexes (and can transmit those of the recessive sex) is latently
+hermaphrodite. A homosexual tendency may thus be regarded as simply the
+psychical manifestation of special characters of the recessive sex,
+susceptible of being evolved under changed circumstances, such as may
+occur near puberty, and associated with changed metabolism.<a name='2_FNanchor_128'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_128'><sup>[128]</sup></a></p>
+
+<div class='blkquot'><p>William James (<i>Principles of Psychology</i>, vol. ii, p. 439)
+ considered inversion &quot;a kind of sexual appetite of which very
+ likely most men possess the germinal possibility.&quot; Conolly Norman
+ (Article &quot;Sexual Perversion,&quot; Tuke's <i>Dictionary of Psychological
+ Medicine</i>) also stated that &quot;the sexual passion, at its first
+ appearance, is always indefinite, and is very easily turned in a
+ wrong direction,&quot; and he apparently accounted for inversion by
+ this fact, and by the precocity of neurotics. Obici and
+ Marchesini (<i>Le 'Amicizie' di collegio</i>, p. 126) refer to the
+ indeterminate character of the sexual feelings when they first
+ begin to develop. A correspondent believes that sexual feelings
+ are undifferentiated in the early years about puberty, but at the
+ same time considers that school life is to some extent
+ responsible; &quot;the holidays,&quot; he adds, &quot;are sufficiently long to
+ counteract it, however, provided the boy has sisters and they
+ have friends; the change from school fare and work to home
+ naturally results in a greater surplus of nerve-force, and I
+ think most boys 'fool about' with servants or their sisters'
+ friends.&quot; Moll (<i>Kontr&auml;re Sexualempfindung</i>, 1889, pp. 6 and 356)
+ does not think it proved that a stage of undifferentiated sexual
+ feeling always occurs, although we have to recognize that it is
+ of frequent occurrence. In his later work (1909, <i>Das Sexualleben
+ des Kindes</i>, English translation, <i>The Sexual Life of the Child</i>,
+ ch. iv), Moll remains of the same opinion that a homosexual
+ tendency is very frequent in normal children, whose later
+ development is quite normal; it begins between the ages of 7 and
+ 10 (or even at 5) and may last to 20.</p>
+
+<p> In recent years Freud has accepted and developed the conception
+ of the homosexual strain; as normal in early life. Thus, in 1905,
+ in his &quot;Bruchst&uuml;ck einer Hysterie-Analyse&quot; (reprinted in the
+ second series of <i>Sammlung Kleiner Schriften zur Neurosenlehre</i>,
+ 1909), Freud regards it as a well-known fact that boys and girls
+ at puberty normally show plain signs of the existence of a
+ homosexual tendency. Under favorable circumstances this tendency
+ is overcome, but when a happy heterosexual love is not
+ established it remains liable to reappear under the influence of
+ an appropriate stimulus. In the neurotic these homosexual <a name='2_Page_81'></a>germs
+ are more highly developed. &quot;I have never carried through any
+ psychoanalysis of a man or a woman,&quot; Freud states, &quot;without
+ discovering a very significant homosexual tendency.&quot; Ferenczi,
+ again (<i>Jahrbuch f&uuml;r Psychoanalytische Forschungen</i>, Bd. iii,
+ 1911, p. 119), without reference to any physical basis of the
+ impulse, accepts &quot;the psychic capacity of the child to direct his
+ originally objectless eroticism to one or both sexes,&quot; and terms
+ this disposition <i>ambisexuality</i>. The normality of a homosexual
+ element in early life may be said to be accepted by most
+ psychoanalysts, even of the schools that are separated from
+ Freud. Stekel would go farther, and regards various psychic
+ sexual anomalies as signs of a concealed bisexual tendency;
+ psychic impotence, the admiration of men for masculine women and
+ of women for feminine men, various forms of fetichism,&mdash;they are
+ all masks of homosexuality (Stekel, <i>Zentralblatt f&uuml;r
+ Psychoanalyse</i>, vol. ii, April, 1912). </p></div>
+
+<p>These schoolboy affections and passions arise, to a large extent,
+spontaneously, with the evolution of the sexual emotions, though the
+method of manifestation may be a matter of example or suggestion. As the
+sexual emotions become stronger, and as the lad leaves school or college
+to mix with men and women in the world, the instinct usually turns into
+the normal channel, in which channel the instincts of the majority of boys
+have been directed from the earliest appearance of puberty, if not
+earlier. But a certain proportion remain insensitive to the influence of
+women, and these may be regarded as true sexual inverts. Some of them are
+probably individuals of somewhat undeveloped sexual instincts. The members
+of this group are of some interest psychologically, although from the
+comparative quiescence of their sexual emotions they have received little
+attention. The following communication which I have received from a
+well-accredited source is noteworthy from this point of view:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class='blkquot'><p>&quot;The following facts may possibly be of interest to you, though
+ my statement of them is necessarily general and vague. I happen
+ to know intimately three cases of men whose affections have
+ chiefly been directed exclusively to persons of their own sex.
+ The first, having practised masturbation as a boy, and then for
+ some ten years ceased to practise it (to such an extent that he
+ even inhibited his erotic dreams), has since recurred to it
+ deliberately (at about fortnightly intervals) as a substitute for
+ copulation, for which he has never felt the least desire. But
+ <a name='2_Page_82'></a>occasionally, when sleeping with a male friend, he has emissions
+ in the act of embracing. The second is constantly and to an
+ abnormal extent (I should say) troubled with erotic dreams and
+ emissions, and takes drugs, by doctor's advice, to reduce this
+ activity. He has recently developed a sexual interest in women,
+ but for ethical and other reasons does not copulate with them. Of
+ the third I can say little, as he has not talked to me on the
+ subject; but I know that he has never had intercourse with women,
+ and has always had a natural and instinctive repulsion to the
+ idea. In all these, I imagine, the physical impulse of sex is
+ less imperative than in the average man. The emotional impulse,
+ on the other hand, is very strong. It has given birth to
+ friendships of which I find no adequate description anywhere but
+ in the dialogues of Plato; and, beyond a certain feeling of
+ strangeness at the gradual discovery of a temperament apparently
+ different to that of most men, it has provoked no kind of
+ self-reproach or shame. On the contrary, the feeling has been
+ rather one of elation in the consciousness of a capacity of
+ affection which appears to be finer and more spiritual than that
+ which commonly subsists between persons of different sexes. These
+ men are all of intellectual capacity above the average; and one
+ is actively engaged in the world, where he is both respected for
+ his capacity and admired for his character. I mention this
+ particularly, because it appears to be the habit, in books upon
+ this subject, to regard the relation in question as pathological,
+ and to select cases where those who are concerned in it are
+ tormented with shame and remorse. In the cases to which I am
+ referring nothing of the kind subsists.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;In all these cases a physical sexual attraction is recognized as
+ the basis of the relation, but as a matter of feeling, and partly
+ also of theory, the ascetic ideal is adopted.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;These are the only cases with which I am personally and
+ intimately acquainted. But no one can have passed through a
+ public-school and college life without constantly observing
+ indications of the phenomenon in question. It is clear to me that
+ in a large number of instances there is no fixed line between
+ what is called distinctively 'friendship' and love; and it is
+ probably the influence of custom and public opinion that in most
+ cases finally specializes the physical passion in the direction
+ of the opposite sex.&quot; </p></div>
+
+<p>The classification of the varieties of homosexuality is a matter of
+difficulty, and no classification is very fundamental. The early attempts
+of Krafft-Ebing and others at elaborate classification are no longer
+acceptable. Even the most elementary groupings become doubtful when we
+have definitely to fit our cases into them. The old distinction between
+congenital and acquired <a name='2_Page_83'></a>homosexuality has ceased to possess significance.
+When we have recognized that there is a tendency for homosexuality to
+arise in persons of usually normal tendency who are placed under
+conditions (as on board ship or in prison) where the exercise of normal
+sexuality is impossible, there is little further classification to be
+achieved along this line.<a name='2_FNanchor_129'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_129'><sup>[129]</sup></a> We have gone as far as is necessary by
+admitting a general undefined homosexuality,&mdash;a relationship of
+unspecified nature to persons of the same sex,&mdash;in addition to the more
+specific sexual inversion.<a name='2_FNanchor_130'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_130'><sup>[130]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>It may now be said to be recognized by all authorities, even by Freud who
+emphasizes a special psychological mechanism by which homosexuality may
+become established, that a congenital predisposition as well as an
+acquired tendency is necessary to constitute true inversion, apparent
+exceptions being too few to carry much weight. Krafft-Ebing, N&auml;cke, Iwan
+Bloch, who at one time believed in the possibility of acquired inversion,
+all finally abandoned that view, and even Schrenck-Notzing, a vigorous
+champion of the doctrine of acquired inversion twenty years ago, admits
+the necessity of a favoring predisposition, an admission which renders the
+distinction between innate and acquired an unimportant, if not a merely
+verbal, distinction.<a name='2_FNanchor_131'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_131'><sup>[131]</sup></a> Supposing, indeed, that we are prepared to admit
+that true inversion may be purely acquired the decision in any particular
+case must be extremely difficult, and I have found very few cases which,
+even with imperfect knowledge, could fairly so be termed. <a name='2_Page_84'></a></p>
+
+<p>Even the cases (to which Schopenhauer long since referred) in which
+inversion is only established late in life, are no longer regarded as
+constituting a difficulty in accepting the doctrine of the congenital
+nature of inversion; in such cases the inversion is merely retarded. The
+conception of retarded inversion,&mdash;that is to say a latent congenital
+inversion becoming manifest at a late period in life,&mdash;was first brought
+forward by Thoinot in 1898 in his <i>Attentats aux M&oelig;urs</i>, in order
+to supersede the unsatisfactory conception, as he considered it to be, of
+acquired inversion. Thoinot regarded retarded inversion as relatively rare
+and of no great importance but more accessible to therapeutic measures.
+Three years later, Krafft-Ebing, toward the close of his life, adopted the
+same conception; the cases to which he applied it were all, he considered,
+of bisexual disposition and usually, also, marked by sexual hyperesthesia.
+This way of looking at the matter was speedily championed by N&auml;cke and may
+now be said to be widely accepted.<a name='2_FNanchor_132'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_132'><sup>[132]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>Moll, earlier than Thoinot, had pointed out that it is difficult to
+believe that homosexuality in late life can ever be produced without at
+least some inborn weakness of the heterosexual impulse, and that we must
+not deny the possibility of heredity even when homosexuality appears at
+the age of 50 or 60.<a name='2_FNanchor_133'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_133'><sup>[133]</sup></a></p>
+
+<div class='blkquot'><p>Moll believes it is very doubtful whether heterosexual satiety
+ alone can ever suffice to produce homosexuality. N&auml;cke was
+ careful to set aside the cases, to which much significance was
+ once attached, in which old men with failing sexual powers, or
+ younger men exhausted by heterosexual debauchery, are attracted
+ to boys. In such cases, which include the majority of those
+ appearing late, N&auml;cke regarded the inversion <a name='2_Page_85'></a>as merely spurious,
+ the <i>faute de mieux</i> of persons no longer apt for normal sexual
+ activity.</p>
+
+<p> Such cases no doubt need more careful psychological study than
+ they usually receive. F&eacute;r&eacute; once investigated a case of this kind
+ in which a healthy young man (though with slightly neurotic
+ heredity on one side) practised sexual intercourse excessively
+ between the ages of 20 and 23&mdash;often impelled more by <i>amour
+ propre</i> (or what Adler would term the &quot;masculine protest&quot; of the
+ organically inferior) than sexual desire&mdash;and then suddenly
+ became impotent, at the same time losing all desire, but without
+ any other loss of health. Six months later potency slowly
+ returned, though never to the same extent, and he married. At the
+ age of 35 symptoms of locomotor ataxia began to appear, and some
+ years later he again became impotent, but without losing sexual
+ desire. Suddenly one day, on sitting in close contact with a
+ young man at a <i>table d'h&ocirc;te</i>, he experienced a violent erection;
+ he afterward found that the same thing occurred with other young
+ men, and, though he had no psychic desire for men, he was
+ constrained to seek such contact, and a repugnance for women and
+ their sexuality arose. Five months later a complete paraplegic
+ impotence set in; and then both the homosexual tendency and the
+ aversion to women disappeared. (F&eacute;r&eacute;, <i>L'Instinct Sexuel</i>, p.
+ 184.) In such a case, under the influence of disease, excessive
+ stimulation seems to result in more or less complete sexual
+ anesthesia, just as temporarily we may be more or less blinded by
+ excess of light; and functional power reasserts itself under the
+ influence of a different and normally much weaker stimulus.</p>
+
+<p> Leppmann, who has studied the homosexual manifestations of
+ previously normal old men toward boys (&quot;Greisenalter und
+ Kriminalit&auml;t,&quot; <i>Zeitschrift f&uuml;r Psychotherapie</i>, Bd. i, Heft 4,
+ 1909), considers the chief factor to be a flaring up of the
+ sexual impulse in a perverted direction in an early stage of
+ morbid cerebral disturbance, not amounting to insanity and not
+ involving complete irresponsibility. In such cases, Leppmann
+ believes, the subject may, through his lack of power, be brought
+ back to the beginning of his sexual life and to the perhaps
+ unconsciously homosexual attractions of that age. </p></div>
+
+<p>With the recognition that homosexuality in youth may be due to an as yet
+undifferentiated sexual impulse, homosexuality in mature age to a retarded
+development on a congenital basis, and homosexuality in sold age to a
+return to the attitude of youth, the area of spurious or &quot;pseudo&quot;
+homosexuality seems to me to be very much restricted. Most, perhaps all,
+authorities still accept the reality of this spurious homosexuality <a name='2_Page_86'></a>in
+heterosexual persons. But they enter into no details concerning it, and
+they bring forward no minutely observed cases in which it occurred.
+Hirschfeld, in discussing the diagnosis of homosexuality and seeking to
+distinguish genuine from spurious inverts,<a name='2_FNanchor_134'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_134'><sup>[134]</sup></a> enumerates three classes
+of the latter: (1) those who practise homosexuality for purposes of gain,
+more especially male prostitutes and blackmailers; (2) persons who, from
+motives of pity, good nature, friendship, etc., allow themselves to be the
+objects of homosexual desire; (3) normal persons who, when excluded from
+the society of the opposite sex, as in schools, barracks, on board ship,
+or in prison, have sexual relations with persons of their own sex. Now
+Hirschfeld clearly realizes that the mere sexual act is no proof of the
+direction of the sexual impulse; it may be rendered possible by mechanical
+irritation (as by the stimulation of a full bladder) and in women without
+any stimulation at all; such cases can have little psychological
+significance. Moreover, he seems to admit that some subdivisions of his
+first class are true inverts. He further mentions that some 75 per cent.
+of the individuals included in these classes are between 15 and 25 years
+of age, that is to say, that they have scarcely emerged from the period
+when we have reason to believe that, in a large number of individuals at
+all events, the sexual impulse is not yet definitely differentiated; so
+that neither its homosexual nor its heterosexual tendencies can properly
+be regarded as spurious.</p>
+
+<p>If, indeed, we really accept the very reasonable view, that the basis of
+the sexual life is bisexual, although its direction may be definitely
+fixed in a heterosexual or homosexual direction at a very early period in
+life, it becomes difficult to see how we can any longer speak with
+certainty of a definitely spurious class of homosexual persons. Everyone
+of Hirschfeld's three classes may well contain a majority of genuinely
+homosexual or bisexual persons. The prostitutes and even the blackmailers
+are certainly genuine inverts in very many cases. Those persons, again,
+who allow themselves to be the recipients of homosexual attentions <a name='2_Page_87'></a>may
+well possess traces of homosexual feeling, and are undoubtedly in very
+many cases lacking in vigorous heterosexual impulse. Finally, the persons
+who turn to their own sex when forcibly excluded from the society of the
+opposite sex, can by no means be assumed, without question, to be normal
+heterosexual persons. It is only a small proportion of heterosexual
+persons who experience these impulses under such conditions. There are
+always others who under the same conditions remain emotionally attracted
+to the opposite sex and sexually indifferent to their own sex. There is
+evidently a difference, and that difference may most reasonably be
+supposed to be in the existence of a trace of homosexual feeling which is
+called into activity under the abnormal conditions, and subsides when the
+stronger heterosexual impulse can again be gratified.</p>
+
+<p>The real distinction would seem, therefore, to be between a homosexual
+impulse so strong that it subsists even in the presence of the
+heterosexual object, and a homosexual impulse so weak that it is eclipsed
+by the presence of the heterosexual object. We could not, however,
+properly speak of the latter as any more &quot;spurious&quot; or &quot;pseudo&quot; than the
+former. A heterosexual person who experiences a homosexual impulse in the
+absence of any homosexual disposition is not today easy to accept. We can
+certainly accept the possibility of a mechanical or other non-sexual
+stimulus leading to a sexual act contrary to the individual's disposition.
+But usually it is somewhat difficult to prove, and when proved it has
+little psychological significance or importance. We may expect, therefore,
+to find &quot;pseudo-homosexuality,&quot; or spurious homosexuality, playing a
+dwindling part in classification.</p>
+
+<p>The simplest of all possible classifications, and that which I adopted in
+the earlier editions of the present <i>Study</i>, merely seeks to distinguish
+between those who, not being exclusively attracted to the opposite sex,
+are exclusively attracted to the same sex, and those who are attracted to
+both sexes. The first are the homosexual, whether or not the attraction
+springs from genuine inversion. The second are the bisexual, or, as they
+were <a name='2_Page_88'></a>formerly more often termed, following Krafft-Ebing, psycho-sexual
+hermaphrodites.<a name='2_FNanchor_135'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_135'><sup>[135]</sup></a> There would thus seem to be a broad and simple
+grouping of all sexually functioning persons into three comprehensive
+divisions: the heterosexual, the bisexual, and the homosexual.</p>
+
+<p>Even this elementary classification seems however of no great practical
+use. The bisexual group is found to introduce uncertainty and doubt. Not
+only a large proportion of persons who may fairly be considered normally
+heterosexual have at some time in their lives experienced a feeling which
+may be termed sexual toward individuals of their own sex, but a very large
+proportion of persons who are definitely and markedly homosexual are found
+to have experienced sexual attraction toward, and have had relationships
+with, persons of the opposite sex. The social pressure, urging all persons
+into the normal sexual channel, suffices to develop such slight germs of
+heterosexuality as homosexual persons may possess, and so to render them
+bisexual. In the majority of adult bisexual persons it would seem that the
+homosexual tendency is stronger and more organic than the heterosexual
+tendency. Bisexuality would thus in a large number of cases be comparable
+to ambidexterity, which Biervliet has found to occur most usually in
+people who are organically left-handed.<a name='2_FNanchor_136'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_136'><sup>[136]</sup></a> While therefore the division
+into heterosexual, bisexual, and homosexual is a useful superficial
+division, it is scarcely a scientific classification.</p>
+
+<p>In the face of these various considerations, and in view of the fact that,
+while I feel justified in regarding the histories of my cases as reliable
+so far as they go, I have not been always <a name='2_Page_89'></a>able to explore them
+extensively, it has seemed best to me to attempt no classification at all.</p>
+
+<p>The order in which the following histories appear is not, therefore, to be
+regarded as possessing any significance.</p>
+
+<div class='blkquot'><p>It may be proper, at this point, to say a few words as to the
+ reliability of the statements furnished by homosexual persons.
+ This has sometimes been called in question. Many years ago we
+ used to be told that inverts are such lying and deceitful
+ degenerates that it was impossible to place reliance on anything
+ they said. It was also usual to say that when they wrote
+ autobiographical accounts of themselves they merely sought to
+ mold them in the fashion of those published by Krafft-Ebing. More
+ recently the psychoanalysts have made a more radical attack on
+ all histories not obtained by their own methods as being quite
+ unreliable, even when put forth in good faith, in part because
+ the subject withholds much that he either regards as too trivial
+ or too unpleasant to bring forward, and in part because he cannot
+ draw on that unconscious field within himself wherein, it is
+ held, the most significant facts in his own sexual history are
+ concealed. Thus Sadger (&quot;Ueber den Wert der Autobiographien
+ Sexuell Perverser,&quot; <i>Fortschritte der Medizin</i>, nos. 26-28, 1913)
+ vigorously puts forward this view and asserts that the
+ autobiographies of inverts are worthless, although his assertions
+ are somewhat discounted by the fact that they accompany an
+ autobiography, written in the usual manner, to which he
+ attributes much value.</p>
+
+<p> The objection to homosexual autobiographic statements dates from
+ a period when the homosexual were very little known, and it was
+ supposed that their moral character generally was fairly
+ represented by a small section among them which attracted more
+ attention than the rest by reason of discreditable conduct. But,
+ in reality, as we now know, there are all sorts of people, with
+ all varieties of moral character, to be found among inverts, just
+ as among normal people. Sadger (<i>Archiv f&uuml;r
+ Kriminal-Anthropologie</i>, 1913, p. 199) complains of the &quot;great
+ insincerity of inverts in not acknowledging their inversion;&quot;
+ but, as Sadger himself admits, we cannot be surprised at this so
+ long as inversion is counted a crime. The most normal persons,
+ under similar conditions, would be similarly insincere. If the
+ homosexual differ in any respect, under this aspect, from the
+ heterosexual, it is by exhibiting a more frequent tendency to be
+ slightly neuropathic, nervously sensitive, and femininely
+ emotional. These tendencies, while on the one hand they are
+ liable to induce a very easily detectable vanity, may also lead
+ to an unusual self-subordination to veracity. On the whole, it
+ may be said, in my own experience, that the best <a name='2_Page_90'></a>histories
+ written by the homosexual compare favorably for frankness,
+ intelligence, and power of self-analysis with those written by
+ the heterosexual.</p>
+
+<p> The ancient allegation that inverts have written their own
+ histories on the model, or under the suggestion, of those
+ published in Krafft-Ebing's <i>Psychopathia Sexualis</i> can scarcely
+ have much force now that the published histories are so extremely
+ varied and numerous that they cannot possibly produce any uniform
+ impression on the most sensitively receptive mind. As a matter of
+ fact, there is no doubt that inverts have frequently been
+ stimulated to set down the narrative of their own experiences
+ through reading those written by others. But the stimulation has,
+ as often as not, lain in the fact that their own experiences have
+ seemed different, not that they have seemed identical. The
+ histories that they read only serve as models in the sense that
+ they indicate the points on which information is desired. I have
+ often been able to verify this influence, which would in any case
+ seem to be fairly obvious.</p>
+
+<p> Psycho-analysis is, in theory, an ideal method of exploring many
+ psychic conditions, such as hysteria and obsessions, which are
+ obscure and largely concealed beneath the psychic surface. In
+ most homosexual cases the main facts are, with the patient's
+ good-will and the investigator's tact, not difficult to
+ ascertain. Any difficulties which psychoanalysis may help to
+ elucidate mainly concern the early history of the case in
+ childhood, and, regarding these, psychoanalysis may sometimes
+ raise questions which it cannot definitely settle.
+ Psycho-analysis reveals an immense mass of small details, any of
+ which may or may not possess significance, and in determining
+ which are significant the individuality of the psychoanalyst
+ cannot fail to come into play. He will necessarily tend to
+ arrange them according to a system. If, for instance, he regards
+ infantile incestuous emotions or early Narcissism as an essential
+ feature of the mechanism of homosexuality, a conscientious
+ investigator will not rest until he has discovered traces of
+ them, as he very probably will. (See, <i>e.g.</i>, Sadger, &quot;Fragment
+ der Psychoanalyse eines Homosexuellen,&quot; <i>Jahrbuch f&uuml;r sexuelle
+ Zwischenstufen</i>, Bd. ix, 1908; and <i>cf.</i> Hirschfeld, <i>Die
+ Homosexualit&auml;t</i>, p. 164). But the exact weight and significance
+ of these traces may still be doubtful, and, even if considerable
+ in one case, may be inconsiderable in another. Freud, who sets
+ forth one type of homosexual mechanism, admits that there may be
+ others. Moreover, it must be added that the psychoanalytic method
+ by no means excludes unconscious deception by the subject, as
+ Freud found, and so was compelled to admit the patient's tendency
+ to &quot;fantasy,&quot; as Adler has to &quot;fictions,&quot; as a fundamental
+ psychic tendency of the &quot;unconscious.&quot;</p><a name='2_Page_91'></a>
+
+<p> The force of these considerations is now beginning to be
+ generally recognized. Thus Moll (art. &quot;Homosexualit&auml;t,&quot; in 4th
+ ed. of Eulenburg's <i>Realencyclop&auml;die der gesamten Heilkunde</i>,
+ 1909, p. 611) rightly says that while the invert may occasionally
+ embroider his story, &quot;the expert can usually distinguish between
+ the truth and the poetry, though it is unnecessary to add that
+ complete confidence on the patient's part is necessary,&quot; N&auml;cke,
+ again (<i>Sexual-Probleme</i>, September, 1911, p. 619), after quoting
+ with approval the remark of one of the chief German authorities,
+ Dr. Numa Praetorius, that &quot;a great number of inverts' histories
+ are at the least as trustworthy as the attempts of
+ psychoanalysts, especially when they come from persons skillful
+ in self-analysis,&quot; adds that &quot;even Freudian analysis gives no
+ absolute guarantee for truth. A healthy skepticism is
+ justifiable&mdash;but not an unhealthy skepticism!&quot; Hirschfeld, also
+ (<i>Die Homosexualit&auml;t</i>, p. 164), whose knowledge of such histories
+ is unrivalled, remarks that while we may now and then meet with a
+ case of <i>pseudo-logia fantastica</i> in connection with psychic
+ debility on the basis of a psychopathic constitution, &quot;taken all
+ in all any generalized assertion of the falsehood of inverts is
+ an empty fiction, and is merely a sign that the physicians who
+ make it have not been able to win the trust of the men and women
+ who consult them.&quot; My own experience has fully convinced me of
+ the truth of this, statement. I am assured that many of the
+ inverts I have met not only possess a rare power of intellectual
+ self-analysis (stimulated by the constant and inevitable contrast
+ between their own feelings and those of the world around them),
+ but an unsparing sincerity in that self-analysis not so very
+ often attained by normal people.</p>
+
+<p> The histories which follow have been obtained in various ways,
+ and are of varying degrees of value. Some are of persons whom I
+ have known very well for very long periods, and concerning whom I
+ can speak very positively. A few are from complete strangers
+ whose good faith, however, I judge from internal evidence that I
+ am able to accept. Two or three were written by persons
+ who&mdash;though educated, in one case a journalist&mdash;had never heard
+ of inversion, and imagined that their own homosexual feelings
+ were absolutely unique in the world. A fair number were written
+ by persons whom I do not myself know, but who are well known to
+ others in whose judgment I feel confidence. Perhaps the largest
+ number are concerned with individuals who wrote to me
+ spontaneously in the first place, and whom I have at intervals
+ seen or heard from since, in some cases during a very long
+ period, so that I have slowly been able to fill in their
+ histories, although the narratives, as finally completed, may
+ have the air of being written down at a single sitting. I have
+ not admitted any <a name='2_Page_92'></a>narrative which I do not feel that I am
+ entitled to regard as a substantially accurate statement of the
+ facts, although allowance must occasionally be made for the
+ emotional coloring of these facts, the invert sometimes
+ cherishing too high an opinion, and sometimes too low an opinion,
+ of his own personality.</p>
+
+<p> <b>HISTORY I.&mdash;</b>Both parents healthy; father of unusually fine
+ <i>physique</i>. He is himself a manual worker and also of
+ exceptionally fine <i>physique</i>. He is, however, of nervous
+ temperament. He is mentally bright, though not highly educated, a
+ keen sportsman, and in general a good example of an all-around
+ healthy Englishman.</p>
+
+<p> While very affectionate, his sexual desires are not strongly
+ developed on the physical side, and seem never to have been so.
+ He sometimes masturbated about the age of puberty, but never
+ afterward. He does not appear to have well-marked erotic dreams.
+ There used to be some attraction toward women, though it was
+ never strong. At the age of 26 he was seduced by a woman and had
+ connection with her once. Afterward he had reason to think she
+ had played him false in various ways. This induced the strongest
+ antipathy, not only to this woman, but to all marriageable women.
+ A year after this episode homosexual feeling first became clear
+ and defined. He is now 33, and feels the same antipathy to women;
+ he hates even to speak of marriage.</p>
+
+<p> There has only been one really strong attraction, toward a man of
+ about the same age, but of different social class, and somewhat a
+ contrast to him, both physically and mentally. So far as the
+ physical act is concerned this relationship is not definitely
+ sexual, but it is of the most intimate possible kind, and the
+ absence of the physical act is probably largely due to
+ circumstances. At the same time there is no conscious desire for
+ the act for its own sake, and the existing harmony and
+ satisfaction are described as very complete. There is no
+ repulsion to the physical side, and he regards the whole
+ relationship as quite natural.</p>
+
+<p> <b>HISTORY II.&mdash;</b>B. O., English, aged 35, missionary abroad. A brother
+ is more definitely inverted. B. O. has never had any definitely
+ homosexual relationships, although he has always been devoted to
+ boys; nor has he had any relationships with women. &quot;As regards
+ women,&quot; he says, &quot;I feel I have not the patience to try and
+ understand them; they are petulant and changeable,&quot; etc. He
+ objects to being called &quot;abnormal,&quot; and thinks that people like
+ himself are &quot;<i>extremely</i> common.&quot;</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I have never wanted to kiss boys,&quot; he writes, &quot;nor to handle
+ them in any way except to put my arm around them at their studies
+ and at other similar times. Of course, with really little boys,
+ it is different, but boys and girls under 14 seem to me much
+ alike, and I can love either equally well. As to any sort of
+ sexual connection between <a name='2_Page_93'></a>myself and one of my own sex, I cannot
+ think of it otherwise than with disgust. I can imagine great
+ pleasure in having connection with a woman, but their natures do
+ not attract me. Indeed, my liking for my own sex seems to consist
+ almost entirely in a preference for the masculine character, and
+ the feeling that as an object to <i>look at</i> the male body is
+ really more beautiful than the female. When any strong
+ temptations to sexual passion come over me in my waking moments,
+ it is of women I think. On the other hand, I have to confess that
+ after being with some lad I love for an hour or two, I have
+ sometimes felt my sexual organs roused. But only once in my life
+ have I experienced a strong desire to sleep in the same bed with
+ a particular lad, and even then no idea of doing anything entered
+ my mind. Needless to say, I did not sleep with him.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I never feel tempted by any girls here, although I see so many
+ with their bodies freely exposed, and plenty of them have really
+ pretty faces. Neither do I feel tempted to do anything improper
+ with any of the boys, although I frequently sit talking with one
+ who has very little on. But I find the constant sight of
+ well-shaped bare limbs has a curious effect on the mind and comes
+ before one's imagination as a picture at unlooked-for times. But
+ the most curious thing of all is this: There are several lads
+ here of whom I am very fond. Now when they are near me I think of
+ them with only the purest and most tender feelings, but sometimes
+ at night when I am half asleep, or when I am taking my midday
+ siesta, my imagination pictures one of these lads approaching a
+ girl, or actually lying with her, and the strange thing is that I
+ do not feel any desire myself to approach the girl, but I feel I
+ wish I were in <i>her</i> place and the lad was coming to <i>me</i>. In my
+ calm, waking moments it disgusts and rather horrifies me to find
+ myself apparently so unsexed&mdash;yet such is the fact, and the
+ experience, with only slight changes, repeats itself over and
+ over again. It is not that I, as a man, wish even in imagination
+ to act improperly with a boy, but I feel I would like to be in
+ the girl's place, and the strange thing is that in all these
+ dreams and imaginings I can always apparently enter into the
+ feelings of the woman better than into those of the man.
+ Sometimes I fancy for a moment that perhaps reincarnation is true
+ and I was a woman in my last life. Sometimes I fancy that when I
+ was in the womb I was formed as a girl and the sexual organs
+ changed just at the last moment. It is a curious problem. Don't
+ think I worry about it. Only at long intervals do I think of
+ it.... The thing has its bright side. Boys and men seem to have
+ tender feelings toward me, such as one expects them to have for
+ members of the opposite sex, and I get into all the closer
+ contact with them in consequence.&quot;</p><a name='2_Page_94'></a>
+
+<p> <b>HISTORY III.&mdash;</b>F. R., English, aged 50, Belongs on both sides to
+ healthy, normal families, of more than average ability. Father
+ was 35 at birth, and mother 27. He is the second of four
+ children. There was a considerable interval between the births of
+ the children, which were spread over twenty-one years. All are
+ normal, except F. R., two of them married and with families.</p>
+
+<p> Owing to the difference of age between the children, F. R. (who
+ was three years younger than his elder brother, and more than
+ four years older than his sister, the third child) had no male
+ companionship and was constantly alone with his mother. &quot;Being
+ naturally imitative,&quot; he remarks, &quot;I think I acquired her tastes
+ and interests and habits of thought. However that may be, I feel
+ sure that my interests and amusements were more girlish than
+ boyish. By way of illustration, I may mention that I have often
+ been told by a friend of my mother's that, on one occasion, I was
+ wanting a new hat, and none being found of a size to fit me, I
+ congratulated myself that I should therefore be obliged to have a
+ <i>bonnet!</i> As regards my feminine tastes and instincts, I have
+ always been conscious of taking interest in questions of family
+ relationships, etiquette, dress (women's as much as, or more
+ than, men's) and other things of that kind, which, as a rule,
+ were treated with indifference or contempt. In the house I take
+ more notice than my sister does of the servants' deficiencies and
+ neglects, and am much more orderly in my arrangements than she
+ is.&quot;</p>
+
+<p> There is nothing markedly feminine in the general appearance.
+ Pubertal development took place at an early age, long before
+ fourteen, with nocturnal emissions, but without erotic dreams.
+ The testicles are well developed, the penis perhaps rather below
+ the average in size, and the prepuce long and narrow. Erection
+ occurs with much facility, especially at night. When young he
+ knew nothing of masturbation, but he began the habit about ten
+ years ago, and has practised it occasionally ever since.</p>
+
+<p> Although he likes the society of women to a certain extent, he
+ soon grows tired of it, and has never had any desire to marry.
+ His sexual dreams never have any relation to women. &quot;I am
+ generally doing or saying something,&quot; he remarks, &quot;to some man
+ whom I know when awake, something which I admit I might wish to
+ do or say if it were not quite out of the question on grounds of
+ propriety and self-respect.&quot;</p>
+
+<p> He has, however, never had any intimate relationships with men,
+ and much that he has heard of such relationships fills him with
+ horror.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;What I feel about myself is,&quot; he writes, &quot;that I have to a
+ certain extent, or in some respects, a feminine mind in a male
+ body; or, I might put it that I am a combination of an immoral
+ (in tendency, rather <a name='2_Page_95'></a>than in act) woman and a religious man.
+ From time to time I have felt strong affection for young men, but
+ I cannot flatter myself that my affection has been reciprocated.
+ At the present time there is a young fellow (23 years old) who
+ acts as my clerk and sits in my room. He is extremely
+ good-looking, and of a type which is generally considered
+ 'aristocratic,' but so far as I (or he) know, he is quite of the
+ lower middle class. He has little to recommend him but a fine
+ face and figure, and there is nothing approaching to mental or
+ social equality between us. But I constantly feel the strongest
+ desire to treat him as a man might a young girl he warmly loved.
+ Various obvious considerations keep me from more than
+ quasi-paternal caresses, and I feel sure he would resent very
+ strongly anything more. This constant repression is trying beyond
+ measure to the nerves, and I often feel quite ill from that
+ cause. Having had no experiences of my own, I am always anxious
+ to learn anything I can of the sexual relations of other men, and
+ their organs, but I have no curiosity whatever concerning the
+ other sex. My chief pleasure and source of gratification is found
+ in the opportunities afforded by Turkish and other baths;
+ wherever, in fact, there is the nude male to be found. But I
+ seldom find in these places anyone who seems to have the same
+ tendency as myself, and certainly I have not met with more than
+ two cases among the attendants, who responded to my hinted desire
+ to see everything. Under a shampooer, particularly an unfamiliar
+ one, I occasionally experience an orgasm, but less often now than
+ when I was younger.&quot;</p>
+
+<p> F. R. is very short-sighted. His favorite color is blue. He is
+ able to whistle. His tastes are chiefly of a literary character,
+ and he has never had any liking for sports. &quot;I have been
+ generally considered ineffective in the use of my hands,&quot; he
+ writes, &quot;and I am certainly not skillful. All I have ever been
+ able to do in that way is to net and do the simpler forms of
+ needlework; but it seems more natural to me to do, or try to do,
+ everything of that sort, and to play on the piano, rather than to
+ shoot or play games. I may add that I am fonder of babies than
+ many women, and am generally considered to be surprisingly
+ capable of holding them! Certainly I enjoy doing so. As a youth,
+ I used to act in charades; but I was too shy to do so unless I
+ was dressed as a woman and veiled; and when I took a woman's part
+ I <i>felt</i> less like <i>acting</i> than I have done in <i>propria
+ persona</i>. A remark made by an uncle once rather annoyed me: that
+ it seemed more like nature than art. But he was quite right.&quot;</p>
+
+<p> <b>HISTORY IV.&mdash;</b>Of Lowland Scotch parentage. Both sides of house
+ healthy and without cerebral or nervous disease. Homosexual
+ desires began at puberty. He practised onanism to a limited
+ extent at school and up to the age of about 22. His erotic dreams
+ are exclusively about <a name='2_Page_96'></a>males. While very friendly and intimate
+ with women of all ages, he is instantly repelled by any display
+ of sexual affection on their side. This has happened in varying
+ degree in three or four cases. With regard to marriage, he
+ remarks: &quot;As there seems no immediate danger of the race dying
+ out, I leave marriage to those who like it.&quot; His male ideal has
+ varied to some extent. It has for some years tended toward a
+ healthy, well-developed, athletic or out-of-door working type,
+ intelligent and sympathetic, but not specially intellectual.</p>
+
+<p> At school his sexual relations were of the simplest type. Since
+ then there have been none. &quot;This,&quot; he says, &quot;is not due either to
+ absence of desire or presence of 'morals.' To put it shortly,
+ 'there were never the time and the place and the loved one
+ together.' In another view, physical desire and the general
+ affection have not always coexisted toward the same person; and
+ the former without the latter is comparatively transient; while
+ the latter stops the gratification of the former, if it is felt
+ that that gratification could in any way make the object of
+ affection unhappy, mentally or emotionally.&quot;</p>
+
+<p> He is healthy and fairly well developed; of sensitive, emotional
+ nature, but self-controlled; mentally he is receptive and
+ aggressive by turns, sometimes uncritical, sometimes analytical.
+ His temper is equable, and he is strongly affectionate. Very fond
+ of music and other arts, but not highly imaginative.</p>
+
+<p> Of sexual inversion in the abstract he says he has no views, but
+ he thus sums up his moral attitude: &quot;I presume that, if it is
+ there, it is there for use or abuse, as men please. I condemn
+ gratification of bodily desire at the expense of others, in
+ whatever form it may take. I condemn it no more in its inverted
+ form than in the ordinary. I believe that affection between
+ persons of the same sex, even when it includes the sexual passion
+ and its indulgences, may lead to results as splendid as human
+ nature can ever attain to. In short, I place it on an absolute
+ equality with love as ordinarily understood.&quot;</p>
+
+
+<p> <b>HISTORY V.&mdash;</b>S. W., aged 64, English, musical journalist. The
+ communication which follows (somewhat abbreviated) was written
+ before S. W. had heard or read anything about sexual inversion,
+ and when he still believed that his own case was absolutely
+ unique.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I am the son of a clergyman, and lived for the first thirteen
+ years of my life in the country town where I was born. Then my
+ father became the vicar of a country village, where I lived until
+ I went out into the world at the age of 18. As during the whole
+ of this time my father had a few pupils, I was educated with
+ them, and never went to school. I was born, I fancy, with sexual
+ passions about as strong as can well be imagined, and at the same
+ time was very precocious in my entry into the stage of puberty.
+ Semen began to form <a name='2_Page_97'></a>a little before my twelfth birthday; hair
+ soon followed, and in a year I was in that respect the equal of
+ an average boy of 15 or 16. I conversed freely with my companions
+ on the relations of the sexes, but, unlike them, had no personal
+ feeling toward girls. In time I became conscious that I was
+ different, as I then believed, and believe now, from all other
+ men. My sexual organs were quite perfect. But in the frame of a
+ man I had the sexual mind of a female. I distinctly disclaim the
+ faintest inclination to perform unnatural acts; the idea of
+ committing sodomy would be <i>most disgusting</i>.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;To come to my actual condition of mind: While totally
+ indifferent to the person of woman (I always enjoyed their
+ friendship and companionship, and many of my best friends have
+ been ladies), I had a burning desire to have carnal intercourse
+ with a male, and had the capacity for falling in love, as it is
+ called, to the utmost extent. In imagination, I possessed the
+ female organ, and felt toward man exactly as an amorous female
+ would. At the time when I became fully conscious of my condition,
+ I attached little importance to it; I had not a notion of its
+ terrible import, nor of the future misery it would entail. All
+ that I had to learn by bitter experience.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I did once think of forcing myself to have connection with a
+ prostitute in order to see whether the actual sensual enjoyment
+ might bring a change, and so have the power to marry. But when it
+ came to thinking over ways and means, my repugnance to the act
+ became so strong that it was quite out of the question. In the
+ case of any male to whom I became attached, I wanted to feel
+ ourselves together, skin to skin, and to be privileged to take
+ such liberties as an amorous female would take if that were all
+ permitted. I sought no purely sensual gratification of any kind;
+ my love was far too genuine for that.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;During the rather more than half a century which has elapsed
+ since my twelfth birthday, I have been genuinely in love about
+ thirteen times. I despair attempting to give an idea of the depth
+ and reality of my feelings. I have alluded to my precocity. I was
+ in love when 12 years old, the object being a man of 24, a
+ well-known analytical chemist. He came to my father's house very
+ frequently; and my heart beat almost at the mention of his name.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;The next serious time I was about 15. It was a farmer's son,
+ about two years older. I don't think that I was ever alone with
+ him, and really only knew him as a member of his family, yet for
+ a time he was my chief interest in life.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;When 21 I had a 'chum,' a youth of 17, who entertained for me,
+ at any rate, a brotherly affection. We were under the same roof,
+ and early one summer morning he got out of bed and came direct to
+ my room to talk about some matter or other. In order to talk more
+ comfortably <a name='2_Page_98'></a>he got into bed with me and we lay there just as two
+ school-girls might have done. This proximity was more than I
+ could stand, and my heart began to beat so that it was impossible
+ that he should not notice it. As, of course, he could not have
+ the slightest notion of the reason, he said in all innocence,
+ 'Why, how your heart beats. I can hear it quite plainly.'</p>
+
+<p> &quot;So far my details are purely innocent. Up to 18, familiarities
+ passed at intervals between me and the son of the village doctor,
+ a youth about two years older than myself, and precociously
+ immoral. I did not really care for him much, but he was my chief
+ companion. Then I became a school-assistant, and for about six
+ years managed to control myself, only, alas, to fall again.
+ Another resolution I kept for eight years, one long fight with my
+ nature. Again I sinned in three instances, extending over three
+ or four years. I now come to a very painful and eventful episode
+ in my unhappy life which I would gladly pass over were it
+ possible. It was a case, in middle life, of sin, discovery, and
+ great folly in addition.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;Before going into details, so far as may be necessary, I cannot
+ help asking you to consider calmly and dispassionately my exact
+ condition compared with that of my fellow-creatures as a whole.
+ In my struggles to resist in the past, I have at times felt as if
+ wrestling in the folds of a python. I again sinned, then, with a
+ youth and his friend. Oddly enough, discovery followed through a
+ man who was actuated by a feeling of revenge for a strictly right
+ act on my part. The lads refused to state more than the truth,
+ and this did not satisfy the man, and a <i>third</i> lad was
+ introduced, who was prepared to say anything. This was not all;
+ some twelve or fifteen more boys made similar accusations! The
+ general belief, in consequence, was that I had committed
+ 'nameless' crimes in all directions, <i>ad lib</i>. If you were to ask
+ me for an explanation of the action of all these boys beyond the
+ <i>third</i>, who, of course, had some special inducements, I can
+ offer none. They may have thought that the original trio were
+ regarded rather in the light of <i>heroes</i>; why should <i>they</i> not
+ be heroes, too?</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I might well feel crushed under such a load of accusations, but
+ that does not excuse the incredible folly of my conduct. I denied
+ alike the modicum of truth and the mass of lying, and went off to
+ America. However, as time passed on and my mind got into a proper
+ state, I felt that the truth must be told some time or other. I
+ accordingly wrote from America to the proper quarter a full
+ confession of my sin with regard to the two youths who had told
+ merely the truth, at the same time pointing out the falsehood of
+ all the rest of the accusations.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I remained in America six years, and actually made money, so
+ that I could return to England with a small capital. I was also
+ under a <a name='2_Page_99'></a>promise to my three sisters (all older than myself) that
+ I would return in their lifetime. My programme was to purchase a
+ small, light business in London, and quietly earn my living; at
+ the same time making my presence known to no one. I <i>did</i> buy
+ such a business, got swindled in the most clever way, and lost
+ every farthing I possessed in the world! I had to make my plight
+ known to old friends who all either gave or lent me money. Still
+ my position was a very precarious one. I tried an insurance
+ agency, one of the last resources of the educated destitute, but
+ soon found out that I was unfitted for work in which <i>impudence</i>
+ is a prime factor. Then an extraordinary stroke of good fortune
+ took place; almost simultaneously I began to get a few music
+ pupils, and literary work in connection with a good musical
+ journal.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;Making my presence known to old friends involved the same
+ information to those who were <i>not</i> friends. My identity as a
+ journalist became known, and as time passed by it seemed to me as
+ if half the world had heard of my alleged iniquities. People who
+ have never set eyes on me seem to regard me in the light of a
+ monster of iniquity who ought not to be suffered to exist. All
+ these outsiders believe that I have committed 'nameless' offenses
+ times innumerable and lift up their hands in speechless horror at
+ the audacity of a man who, so situated, dares to appear openly in
+ public, under his own name, and look people in the face. They
+ have not even the brains to see that this very fearlessness
+ proves the fictitious character of their beliefs. Next, they
+ believe that if only they could get my dismissal from my
+ journalistic post I should be brought to starvation point. This
+ up to a year ago was true. Then an old relative died and left me
+ some property which I sold to invest in an annuity, and thus have
+ just enough to live on quietly, apart from what I may earn. Under
+ such strange conditions it might be asked whether life was not
+ unendurable. Frankly speaking, I cannot say that I find it so. I
+ have in London a few bachelor friends who go with me to theaters,
+ etc. In the suburbs I have about half a dozen family friends.
+ Here I meet with pleasant society and a hearty welcome. I am
+ passionately fond of music, have an excellent piano, and can hear
+ the best concerts in Europe. I go to all good plays. I am a good
+ chess player. Lastly, I am an omnivorous reader. You will allow
+ that my resources for passing the time are not limited.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;Of course, I am sorry that I sinned, and wish that I had not
+ done so. But I disclaim any feeling of shame.&quot;</p>
+
+<p> S. W. was the youngest of four children and the only boy. His
+ father was 40 at his birth, his mother 33. The father was an
+ intellectual man of weak character, the mother a woman of violent
+ and eccentric temper, with, he believes, strong sexual passions.
+ S. W. knows of nothing in the family to account for his own
+ abnormal condition.</p><a name='2_Page_100'></a>
+
+<p> He is short (five feet five inches), but well built, with strong
+ chest and a powerful voice. His arms are weak and flabby
+ (feminine, he thinks), but the legs muscular. As a boy of 14 he
+ could walk forty miles with ease, and he played football till
+ near the age of 45. He is considered manly in character and
+ tastes, but is easily moved to tears under strong excitement.
+ There is no information as to the type of man to whom he is
+ attracted. I may observe, however, that the analytical chemist
+ who first evoked S. W.'s admiration was well known to me some
+ thirty years later, as he was my own teacher in chemistry. At
+ that time he was an elderly man of attractive appearance and
+ character, sympathetic and winning in manner to an almost
+ feminine extent.</p>
+
+<p> S. W. has never felt the slightest sexual attraction toward the
+ opposite sex. The first indications of inverted feeling were at
+ the age of 6 or 7. Watching his father's pupils, boys of 13 or
+ 14, from the windows, he speculated on what their organs of
+ generation were like. &quot;In connection with a girl,&quot; he writes, &quot;I
+ should no more have thought of such a thing than in the case of a
+ block of marble.&quot; About this time, indeed, he at times slept with
+ a sister of 10, who induced him to go through the form of sexual
+ connection, saying that it felt &quot;so funny;&quot; but he merely did
+ this to please her, and without the slightest interest or feeling
+ on his own part. This attitude became more marked with increased
+ knowledge, until he fell ardently in love at the age of 12.
+ Throughout life he has practised masturbation to a certain
+ extent, and is prepared to defend the practice in his own case.
+ His erotic dreams have been of only the vaguest and most shadowy
+ character. He is able to whistle. He takes a warm interest in
+ politics and in philanthropic work. But his chief love is for
+ music and he has published many musical compositions. On the
+ whole, and notwithstanding the persecution he has endured, he
+ does not regard his life as unhappy. At the same time he is
+ keenly conscious of the atmosphere of &quot;Pariahdom&quot; which surrounds
+ inverts, and in his own case this has never been alleviated by
+ any sense of companionship in misery. The facility with which
+ some inverts are said to recognize others of their own kind is
+ quite incomprehensible to him; he has never to his knowledge met
+ one.</p>
+
+
+<p> <b>HISTORY VI.&mdash;</b>E. S., physician, aged 50.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I have some reason,&quot; he writes, &quot;for believing that some of my
+ relatives (on the paternal side) were not normal in their sexual
+ life. But I am sure that no such suspicion was entertained by
+ their friends or associates; they were very reticent people. A
+ great proportion of my near relatives have remained unmarried or
+ deferred marriage until late in life. None of them have been good
+ business men; all seem to have been more deeply concerned in
+ other things than in making&mdash;or in keeping&mdash;money. They have
+ mostly taken little or no share in public <a name='2_Page_101'></a>life, and not cared
+ much for society. Yet they have been folk of more than average
+ ability, with intellectual and &aelig;sthetic interests. We are prone
+ to enthusiasms, but lack perseverance. We are discursive and
+ superficial, perhaps, but none would call us stupid. We are
+ perhaps abnormally self-centered and self-conscious&mdash;never cruel
+ or vicious. Our powers of self-control are considerable; we are
+ conventional people only because we are lazy and intensely
+ dislike any open self-assertion. Yet we are nervous rather than
+ phlegmatic. All that is on the father's side. My maternal
+ ancestors have been concerned with farming and the sea and have
+ also had a similar lack of business capacity, but with less
+ mental adaptiveness and alertness, with more steadiness of
+ purpose, however, always doers rather than dreamers. Among them I
+ remember one cousin who was probably abnormal, although he died
+ when I was too young to notice much. Again, they were all rather
+ reserved people, but more genial with strangers, more socially
+ inclined, and with less self-control.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I was an only child and a spoilt one. I was always quick at
+ school, fond of learning, and finding my lessons no trouble.
+ Serious study I disliked. But for school purposes I did not find
+ it necessary, and had no difficulty in carrying all before me. I
+ was never fond of games, although very fond of being out of doors
+ and of walking. Few of my relatives have been at all keen on
+ sport. I made no close friendships at school and was never very
+ popular with my schoolfellows, who, however, tolerated my odd
+ ways better than might have been expected. I was easily brought
+ to appreciate good literature, but I never had much power of
+ expression or of strenuous thought. I was extremely susceptible
+ and impressible, moved by beauty of any kind, but never at all
+ ambitious or in any way creative. I was easily stimulated to
+ work, and then loved to work; but, unless the stimulus were
+ maintained the natural indolence of my disposition asserted
+ itself, and I wasted my powers in dreams and trifles. My memory
+ was very quick and retentive, in the main, but curiously
+ capricious. I always lacked initiative and decision. At college
+ my successes were continued. I gained medals and prizes, passed
+ my examinations easily, and graduated 'with first-class honors.'
+ In my professional lifework I have been successful rather beyond
+ the average. I love it with all my heart.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I cannot speak with any confidence about the first stirrings of
+ my sexual instincts, but I think I can assert that they have at
+ no time led me to any desire for the opposite sex. It is true
+ that my earliest recollection of the kind is concerned with
+ intimacies with a girl play-fellow, but as we had at the time
+ reached only the mature age of 7 (at the most) I fancy that our
+ mutual exhibitions&mdash;for there was nothing more&mdash;simply satisfied
+ our natural curiosity. Certainly these <a name='2_Page_102'></a>memories are, in my mind,
+ in no way set apart from the recollections of other kinds of
+ play. Next to that I remember the usual schoolboy talk about
+ things hidden and forbidden, but up till I was 12 or so this was
+ simply dirty talk, concerned more with renal and intestinal
+ functions than with any sexual feelings or understanding. One boy
+ was known to us all (and of my not inconsiderable circle of early
+ friends, all grew up to be normal people, who married and had
+ children in due course) for the unusual size of his parts and for
+ the freedom with which he invited and satisfied the curiosity of
+ his friends. He must have been precocious, for he could not have
+ been more than 12, and I remember to have heard that he had a
+ thick growth of pubic hair. Even then, although I know that my
+ curiosity&mdash;to put it at that only&mdash;was active, I never allowed
+ myself to have any dealings with him; and I think I should have
+ discouraged them had they been suggested to me. That is the odd
+ thing about my life: the things I longed intensely to do I would
+ not let myself do, not from any religious or moral scruple, but
+ from some inexplicable fastidiousness or scrupulosity which is
+ yet as active as ever, although I am sure that it would not be
+ able to hold its own could these favorable conditions be
+ repeated, but would be overcome by the imperious and fully grown
+ desires which, by long repression, or by unsatisfactory
+ diversion, have grown to be so strong. Indeed, given the
+ opportunity, and the assurance that no first seduction or
+ corruption of anyone was in question, they would prove quite
+ irrepressible.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;Certainly, long before puberty&mdash;which was early with me&mdash;I
+ remember being greatly attracted to certain boys, and wishing to
+ have an opportunity of sleeping with them. Had I been able to do
+ so, I am sure I should have been impelled to get into as close
+ contact with their naked body as possible, and I do not think I
+ should then have craved for anything more. I knew some
+ boys&mdash;perhaps a little older&mdash;who even then had relations, which
+ were certainly not innocent, with a girl who was a year or two
+ older than any of us. She once kissed me, to my intense shame.
+ But I felt that these relations would have been unspeakably
+ disgusting and I took no particular interest in hearing about
+ them. I remember being fondled and caressed by a very
+ good-looking boy of 16 when I was three or four years younger and
+ had sustained some hurt at play; and I am still able to recall
+ the thrill of delight that I experienced at his touch. Nothing
+ took place that all the world might not have seen, but I remember
+ being taken between his knees as he sat, and his arms being put
+ around my neck, and the warm, soft pressure of his thighs had an
+ unspeakable effect on me.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;About this time, too, an older boy, perhaps about 18, used to
+ get hold of smaller boys when on country walks, to throw them
+ down <a name='2_Page_103'></a>and then look at and toy with their genitals. He was
+ himself a handsome boy, and I was greatly excited when told about
+ this by boys who had experienced it, and wished greatly to have
+ it done to me. It never was; and if it had been attempted I know
+ I should have resisted with all my strength, although my desires
+ would have set me aflame. This boy died before he was 20, with a
+ psoas abscess, and I remember crying myself to sleep the night I
+ learned of his death. Another boy, about three years older than
+ myself, who had very silky hair, I used to be attracted by and I
+ was always trying to stroke his hair, but he always objected.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I must have been about 12 when I first was taught to masturbate
+ by a cousin who was slightly older. At first I thought it silly,
+ but I used to watch him at it, and practised it myself from time
+ to time until I became old enough to experience the proper
+ sensation. Then I have reason to think I gave myself up to it
+ rather freely, but it was generally done in solitude, although it
+ was long before I realized that there was anything wrong about it
+ or that it might prove hurtful. Looking back now, I feel
+ perfectly certain that my instincts were wholly homosexual from
+ the very first. This cousin, who possessed notable intellectual
+ and artistic gifts, married, but I feel sure his liking for his
+ own sex was not normal.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;With another cousin, almost years my junior, I was always on
+ terms of the most affectionate intimacy. My holidays at his
+ parents' house were my greatest delight. We were always together
+ by night or day; we slept in the same bed, literally in each
+ other's arms. To me it afforded the keenest sexual pleasure to
+ press close to his naked body. We used mutually to handle and
+ caress our parts, but without any attempt at mutual masturbation,
+ although at that period I regularly practised it on myself. I
+ asked him once about it, but he had not been taught it by others;
+ and to my great pride and satisfaction I can say that I never
+ either did it to him or asked him to do it to me. This I mention
+ as an instance of my restraint in act, although my thoughts and
+ desires knew no such curb. I remember also an elder brother of
+ his, perhaps three or four years my senior, once showing me (then
+ about 12, I suppose) his semierect penis. He would not allow me
+ to touch it, but showed me how to draw back the foreskin so as to
+ uncover the glans. His penis was large, and the incident was not
+ forgotten. We had no other relation and I know that both he and
+ my own friend grew up to be quite normal men.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I think I must have been about 17 when I got frightened about
+ the occurrence of nocturnal emissions, which I believed were the
+ evil result of masturbation, and for two or three years I
+ continued in considerable mental distress until, when in my
+ second or third year at <a name='2_Page_104'></a>college, I summoned up courage enough to
+ consult our good old family doctor, who reassured me, but made, I
+ now think, too light of my confidences, so that I relapsed the
+ more readily, although much later on, into old habits.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;From our windows at home we looked over a bit of common or down
+ to the beach, and I used to keep watch on warm summer afternoons;
+ over boys who might be bathing, to observe them through our
+ telescope. All this I kept strictly secret and I was never
+ surprised. I might just as well, and without arousing the
+ slightest suspicion of my motive, have walked down to the beach
+ and seen them and chatted with them; but this I could not have
+ brought myself to do. It gave me considerable sexual satisfaction
+ when I was able to see them bathing without pants. I also used to
+ watch them at play on the common, and felt rewarded when I saw,
+ as I not infrequently did, sexual familiarities taking place.
+ These violently excited me and sometimes brought on orgasm,
+ always erection with pleasure. Indeed, it was an experience of
+ this kind that made me return to masturbation after I had given
+ it up for a while. I remember one day seeing two lads of about 16
+ lying on the grass in the sunshine; all at once the bigger lad
+ put out his hand and tried to open his companion's trousers. He
+ resisted with all his might, and a long struggle ensued, ending
+ in the smaller lad having his penis exposed and manipulated by
+ the other. Even at this day the recollection of this excites me.
+ Both lads grew up to be normal men.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;Twice only have I been approached by grown-up people. When I was
+ about 13 I used to meet often, when going to school by train, an
+ old gentleman who courted me, as it were, used often to talk to
+ me and asked me to come to see his well-known scientific
+ collections, but I always had a vague distrust of him and never
+ went. One day in the summer during a spare hour I met him in an
+ empty room in the museum, where there were usually very few
+ visitors at that time of day, and where large show-cases gave
+ concealment. He came up to me and told me he had been away in the
+ country, and that, when making his way home through hedges and
+ thorny bushes, some of the thorns got stuck amongst his clothes
+ and were still giving him uneasiness. 'I would be very grateful,'
+ he said, 'if you would put your hand down and try if you can feel
+ any thorns sticking in my underflannels and pull them out.' He
+ then unbuttoned his braces on one side, undid his trousers and
+ made me thrust my hand over his groin and lower abdomen. I
+ avoided touching his genitals, but he pushed my hand down in that
+ direction until, burning with shame, I made my escape and ran
+ off, not stopping until I was safe in school. I scarcely
+ understood it, but never spoke of it, and avoided him ever
+ <a name='2_Page_105'></a>afterward. I learned later on that he was a well-off bachelor
+ who took a great interest in working lads and young men and did
+ much to help them on in life and keep them, so it was said, from
+ falling into bad company. He died at a great age and left most of
+ his fortune to an institution for lads, as well as large legacies
+ to youths in whom he had been interested.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;The other time was on top of a tramcar when a grown-up man who
+ was near pressed as close to me as he could, began to talk,
+ praised my dark eyes, then put his hand on my thigh under my
+ loose cloak and felt up toward my parts. At the same time he took
+ hold of my hand, caressed it and put it over his parts (it was in
+ the dusk). This excited me and, if we had not been at our
+ destination, I think I would gladly have permitted further
+ familiarities. He tried to ask me where I lived, but there was no
+ time to answer, and the female relative who was with me (on
+ another seat) would no doubt have prevented this from having any
+ further sequel.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;On more than one occasion I have experienced the sexual orgasm
+ as the result of mental anxiety. The first time this occurred was
+ when I was hurrying to avoid being late for school. Another time
+ was when I was about 24, and was extremely anxious to fill an
+ appointment for which I was late. So copious was the emission
+ that I had to go home and change.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;As a medical student, the first reference bearing definitely on
+ the subject of sexual inversion was made in the class of Medical
+ Jurisprudence, where certain sexual crimes were alluded to&mdash;very
+ summarily and inadequately&mdash;but nothing was said of the existence
+ of sexual inversion as the 'normal' condition of certain unhappy
+ people, nor was any distinction drawn between the various
+ non-normal acts, which were all classed together as
+ manifestations of the criminal depravity of ordinary or insane
+ people. To a student beginning to be acutely conscious that his
+ sexual nature differed profoundly from that of his fellows,
+ nothing could be more perplexing and disturbing, and it shut me
+ up more completely in my reserve than ever. I felt that this
+ teaching must be based on some radical error or prejudice or
+ misapprehension, for I knew from my own very clear remembrance of
+ my own development that my peculiarity was not acquired, but
+ inborn; my great misfortune undoubtedly, but not my fault.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;It was still more unfortunate that in the course of the lectures
+ on Clinical Medicine there was not the slightest allusion to the
+ subject. All sorts of rare diseases&mdash;some of which I have not yet
+ met with in the course of twenty-one years of a busy
+ practice&mdash;were fully discussed, but we were left entirely
+ ignorant of a subject so vitally important to me personally, and,
+ as it seems to me, to the profession to which<a name='2_Page_106'></a> I aspired. There
+ might have been an incidental reference to masturbation&mdash;although
+ I do not remember it&mdash;but its real significance received no
+ attention; and what we students knew of it was the result of our
+ reading or of our personal experiences.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;In the class of Mental Disease there was, naturally, more
+ detailed and systematic reference to facts in the sexual life and
+ to sexual inversion as a rare pathological condition. But still
+ there was not a comforting word to reassure me, growing ever more
+ hopelessly ashamed of what it seemed was a criminal or a gravely
+ morbid nature.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;Among all my fellow-students I knew of no one constituted like
+ myself; but my natural reserve&mdash;increased, of course, by my
+ consciousness of what I saw would be thought to be a criminal
+ tendency&mdash;did not urge me to exchange of confidences or to the
+ formation of; close friendships.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;After graduation I became a resident medical officer in the
+ hospital and private assistant to one of the professors&mdash;a
+ physician and teacher of worldwide reputation. With him I
+ associated on the most cordial and affectionate terms; and often
+ in the course of conversation I tried to bring him to discuss the
+ subject, but without success. It was obviously unpleasant and
+ uninteresting to him. Enough was said, however, to enable me to
+ realize that he held the current ideas on the subject; and I
+ would not for worlds have allowed him, to guess that I myself
+ came under the despised and tainted category.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I have seldom heard sexual inversion discussed among my
+ professional friends. They speak of it with disgust or amusement.
+ I have never met a professional man who would consider it
+ dispassionately and scientifically. For them it was a subject
+ entirely belonging to psychological medicine.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I have had no admitted case of it among my patients; but I have
+ often instinctively felt that some who consulted me about other
+ matters would have taken me into their confidence about that, but
+ for their fear of being cruelly misunderstood.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;As to my moral attitude I fear to speak. Grossness disgusts me;
+ but I am not sure that I should be able to resist temptation
+ placed in my way. But I am absolutely sure that I should never,
+ under any circumstances, tempt others to any disgraceful act. If
+ I ever committed any sexual act with one of my own sex whom I
+ loved, I could not look at it or approach it in any other than a
+ sacramental way. This sounds blasphemous and shocking, but I
+ cannot otherwise express my meaning.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;As regards the marriage of inverts, my own feeling is that for a
+ congenital invert&mdash;no matter how fully the situation be explained
+ beforehand&mdash;it is a step fraught with too great possibilities of
+ tragedy and of the deepest unhappiness, to be advised at all. My
+ <a name='2_Page_107'></a>view is that for the invert, far more than for the ordinary
+ person, there is no escape from the supreme necessity of
+ self-control in any relationship he may form. If that be attained
+ then the ideal is a relationship with another man of similar
+ temperament&mdash;not a platonic one, necessarily&mdash;by means of which
+ the highest happiness of both may be reached. But this can occur
+ <i>very</i> seldom.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;To poetry and the fine arts I am very susceptible, and I have
+ given a great deal of time to this study. I am devoted heart and
+ soul to music, which is more and more to me every year I live.
+ Trivial or light music I cannot endure, but of Beethoven, Bach,
+ H&auml;ndel, Schumann, Schubert, Brahms, Tschaikowsky, and Wagner I
+ should never hear enough. Here, too, my sympathies, are very
+ catholic, and I delight in McDowell, Debussy, Richard Strauss,
+ and Hugo Wolf.&quot;</p>
+
+
+<p> <b>HISTORY VII.&mdash;</b>&quot;My parentage is very sound and healthy. Both my
+ parents (who belong to the professional middle class) have good
+ general health; nor can I trace any marked abnormal or diseased
+ tendency, of mind or body, in any records of the family.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;Though of a strongly nervous temperament myself, and sensitive,
+ my health is good. I am not aware of any tendency to physical
+ disease. In early manhood, however, owing, I believe, to the
+ great emotional tension under which I lived, my nervous system
+ was a good deal shattered and exhausted. Mentally and morally my
+ nature is pretty well balanced, and I have never had any serious
+ perturbations in these departments.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;At the age of 8 or 9, and long before distinct sexual feelings
+ declared themselves, I felt a friendly attraction toward my own
+ sex, and this developed after the age of puberty into a
+ passionate sense of love, which, however, never found any
+ expression for itself till I was fully 20 years of age. I was a
+ day-boarder at school and heard little of school-talk on sex
+ subjects, was very reserved and modest besides; no elder person
+ or parent ever spoke to me on such matters; and the passion for
+ my own sex developed gradually, utterly uninfluenced from the
+ outside. I never even, during all this period, and till a good
+ deal later, learned the practice of masturbation. My own sexual
+ nature was a mystery to me. I found myself cut off from the
+ understanding of others, felt myself an outcast, and, with a
+ highly loving and clinging temperament, was intensely miserable.
+ I thought about my male friends&mdash;sometimes boys of my own age,
+ sometimes elder boys, and once even a master&mdash;during the day and
+ dreamed about them at night, but was too convinced that I was a
+ hopeless monstrosity ever to make any effectual advances. Later
+ on it was much the same, but gradually, though slowly, I came to
+ find that there were others like myself. I made a few special
+ friends, and at last it came to me occasionally to sleep with
+ them and to satisfy my imperious need by mutual embraces and
+ emissions. Before this happened, <a name='2_Page_108'></a>however, I was once or twice on
+ the brink of despair and madness with repressed passion and
+ torment.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;Meanwhile, from the first, my feeling, physically, toward the
+ female sex was one of indifference, and later on, with the more
+ special development of sex desires, one of positive repulsion.
+ Though having several female friends, whose society I like and to
+ whom I am sincerely attached, the thought of marriage or
+ cohabitation with any such has always been odious to me.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;As a boy I was attracted in general by boys rather older than
+ myself; after leaving school I still fell in love, in a romantic
+ vein, with comrades of my own standing. Now,&mdash;at the age of
+ 37,&mdash;my ideal of love is a powerful, strongly built man, of my
+ own age or rather younger&mdash;preferably of the working class.
+ Though having solid sense and character, he need not be specially
+ intellectual. If endowed in the latter way, he must not be too
+ glib or refined. Anything effeminate in a man, or anything of the
+ cheap intellectual style, repels me very decisively.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I have never had to do with actual pederasty, so called. My
+ chief desire in love is bodily nearness or contact, as to sleep
+ naked with a naked friend; the specially sexual, though urgent
+ enough, seems a secondary matter. Pederasty, either active or
+ passive, might seem in place to me with one I loved very
+ devotedly and who also loved me to that degree; but I think not
+ otherwise. I am an artist by temperament and choice, fond of all
+ beautiful things, especially the male human form; of active,
+ slight, muscular build; and sympathetic, but somewhat indecisive
+ character, though possessing self-control.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I cannot regard my sexual feelings as unnatural or abnormal,
+ since they have disclosed themselves so perfectly naturally and
+ spontaneously within me. All that I have read in books or heard
+ spoken about the ordinary sexual love, its intensity and passion,
+ lifelong devotion, love at first sight, etc., seems to me to be
+ easily matched by my own experiences in the homosexual form; and,
+ with regard to the morality of this complex subject, my feeling
+ is that it is the same as should prevail in love between man and
+ woman, namely: that no bodily satisfaction should be sought at
+ the cost of another person's distress or degradation. I am sure
+ that this kind of love is, notwithstanding the physical
+ difficulties that attend it, as deeply stirring and ennobling as
+ the other kind, if not more so; and I think that for a perfect
+ relationship the actual sex gratifications (whatever they may be)
+ probably hold a less important place in this love than in the
+ other.&quot;</p>
+
+
+<p> <b>HISTORY VIII.&mdash;</b>M. N., aged 30. &quot;My grandfather might be said to be
+ of abnormal temperament, for, though of very humble origin, he
+ organized and carried out an extremely arduous mission work and
+ became an accomplished linguist, translating the Bible into an
+ Eastern <a name='2_Page_109'></a>tongue and compiling the first dictionary of that
+ language. He died, practically of overwork, at the age of 45. He
+ was twice married, my father being his third son by the second
+ wife. I believe that two, if not more, of the family (numbering
+ seven in all) were inverted, and the only one of them to marry
+ was my father. My grandmother was the last representative of an
+ old and very 'wild' Irish family. She died at an advanced age, of
+ paralysis. My father was 36 and my mother 21 at the time of their
+ marriage. I was born three years after and was their only child.
+ The marriage proved a most unhappy one, they being utterly
+ unsuited to each other in every way.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;My father's health during the first years of his marriage was
+ very delicate, and I have reason to believe that it had been
+ undermined in certain ways by his life abroad. I understand I was
+ born with slight gonorrheal affection, and as a child my health
+ was very indifferent. This latter may have been brought about by
+ the peculiarly unhappy and unnatural life I led. I had no
+ companions of my own age, and did not even attend any school
+ until after my mother's death. My father superintended my
+ education up to that time, and I had free access to a large and
+ very varied library, and a great deal of solitary leisure to
+ enjoy it in. There were a number of medical and scientific books
+ in it, which were my principal favorites, and I remember deciding
+ at a very early age to be a doctor. When about 5 years old I
+ recollect having a sexual dream connected with a railway porter.
+ It afforded me great pleasure to recall this dream, and about
+ that time I discovered a method of self-gratification (there is
+ not much 'teaching' required in these matters!).</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I cannot say that the dream I have mentioned constituted
+ absolutely the first intimation of inverted feeling, but rather
+ that it crystallized vague ideas which I might have already had
+ on the subject. I can recollect that when about between 3 and 4
+ years of age a young fellow of about 20 came to our house several
+ times as a visitor. He was fond of children, I suppose, and I
+ generally sat on his knee and was kissed by him. This was a
+ source of great pleasure to me, but I cannot remember if it was
+ accompanied by erection. I can only recall that his attention and
+ caresses made a greater impression upon me than those of women.
+ When about that age too I was often aroused when sleeping with my
+ mother, and told not to lie on my face. I remember that erection
+ was always present on these occasions. The dream was the first of
+ many of its kind, and in my case they have never been accompanied
+ by emission. They have always been of an 'inverted' character,
+ though I have occasionally had dreams about women. These latter,
+ however, have usually partaken somewhat of the nature of a
+ nightmare!</p>
+
+<p> &quot;Up to the age of 14 I felt much perplexed and depressed by my
+ views on sexual desire, and was convinced that they were peculiar
+ to <a name='2_Page_110'></a>myself. This, combined with the solitary condition of my
+ life, and about four years' continued ill-treatment prior to my
+ mother's death (she had given way to drink for that period), had
+ a very injurious effect on my health, mental and bodily. Looking
+ back from my present point of view, I can understand and forgive
+ many things which appeared monstrous and unjust to me as a child.
+ My mother's life must have been a very unhappy one, and she was
+ bitterly disappointed in many ways, very likely in me as well. My
+ unfortunate, misunderstood temperament led me to be shy and
+ secretive, and I was often ailing, and my training was not
+ calculated to improve matters. At last, however, change and
+ freedom came, and I was sent to a boarding-school. Here, of
+ course, I soon met with attachments and gratifications with other
+ boys. I arrived at puberty, and my health improved under happier
+ surroundings. I was not long in discovering that my companions
+ viewed the pleasures that meant so much to me from an entirely
+ different standpoint. Their gratifications were usually
+ accompanied by conversation about, and a general direction of
+ thought toward, females. When I had turned 15, owing to monetary
+ difficulties I was obliged to leave school, and was soon not only
+ thrown on my own resources, but accountable to no one but myself
+ for my conduct. Of course, my next discovery was that my case, so
+ far from being peculiar, was a most common one, and I was quickly
+ initiated into all the mysteries of inversion, with its
+ freemasonry and 'argot.' Altogether my experience of inverts has
+ been a pretty wide and varied one, and I have always endeavored
+ to classify and compare cases which have come under my notice
+ with a view to arriving at some sort of conclusion or
+ explanation.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I suppose it is due to female versatility or impressibility that
+ it is possible for me to experience mentally the emotions
+ attributable to either sex, according to the age and temperament
+ of my companion; for instance, with one older than myself,
+ possessing well-marked male characteristics, I am able to feel
+ all that surrender and dependence which is so essentially
+ feminine. On the other hand, if with a youth of feminine type and
+ behavior I can realize, with an equal amount of pleasure, the
+ tender, yet dominant, attitude of the male.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I experience no particular 'horror' of women sexually. I should
+ imagine that my feeling toward them resembles very much what
+ normal people feel with regard to others of their own sex.&quot; M. N.
+ remarks that he cannot whistle, and that his favorite color is
+ green. </p></div>
+
+<p>In this case the subject easily found a moral <i>modus vivendi</i> with his
+inverted instinct, and he takes its gratification for granted. In the
+following case, which, I believe, is typical of a large group, the subject
+has never yielded to his inverted impulses, <a name='2_Page_111'></a>and, except so far as
+masturbation is concerned, has preserved strict chastity.</p>
+
+
+<div class='blkquot'><p><b>HISTORY IX.&mdash;</b>R. S., aged 31, American of French descent. &quot;Upon the
+ question of heredity I may say that I belong to a reasonably
+ healthy, prolific, and long-lived family. On my father's side,
+ however, there is a tendency toward pulmonary troubles. He
+ himself died of pneumonia, and two of his brothers and a nephew
+ of consumption. Neither of my parents were morbid or eccentric.
+ Excepting for a certain shyness with strangers, my father was a
+ very masculine man. My mother is somewhat nervous, but is not
+ imaginative, nor at all demonstrative in her affections. I think
+ that my own imaginative and artistic temperament must come from
+ my father's side. Perhaps my French ancestry has something to do
+ with it. With the exception of my maternal grandfather, all my
+ progenitors have been of French descent. My mother's father was
+ English.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I possess a mercurial temperament and a strong sense of the
+ ludicrous. Though my <i>physique</i> is slight, my health has always
+ been excellent. Of late years especially I have been greatly
+ given to introspection and self-scrutiny, but have never had any
+ hallucinations, mental delusions, nor hysterics, and am not at
+ all superstitious. Spiritualistic manifestations, hypnotic
+ dabblings, and the other psychical fads of the day have little or
+ no attraction for me. In fact, I have always been skeptical of
+ them, and they rather bore me.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;At school I was an indolent, dreamy boy, shirking study, but
+ otherwise fairly docile to my teachers. From earliest childhood I
+ have indulged in omnivorous taste for reading, my particular
+ likings being for travels, esthetics, metaphysical and
+ theological subjects, and more recently for poetry and certain
+ forms of mysticism. I never cared much for history or for
+ scientific subjects. From the beginning, too, I showed a strong
+ artistic bent, and possessed an overpowering love for all things
+ beautiful. As a child I was passionately fond of flowers, loved
+ to be in the woods and alone, and wanted to become an artist. My
+ parents opposed the latter wish and I gave way before their
+ opposition.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;In me the homosexual nature is singularly complete, and is
+ undoubtedly congenital. The most intense delight of my childhood
+ (even when a tiny boy in a nurse's charge) was to watch acrobats
+ and riders at the circus. This was not so much for the skillful
+ feats as on account of the beauty of their persons. Even then I
+ cared chiefly for the more lithe and graceful fellows. People
+ told me that circus actors were wicked, and would steal little
+ boys, and so I came to look upon my favorites as half-devil and
+ half-angel. When I was older and could go about alone, I would
+ often hang around the tents of travelling shows in hope of
+ catching <a name='2_Page_112'></a>a glimpse of the actors. I longed to see them naked,
+ without their tights, and used to lie awake at night thinking of
+ them and longing to be loved and embraced by them. A certain
+ bareback rider, a sort of jockey, used especially to please me on
+ account of his handsome legs, which were clothed in fleshlings up
+ to his waist, leaving his beautiful loins uncovered by a
+ breech-clout. There was nothing consciously sensual about these
+ reveries, because at the time I had no sensual feelings or
+ knowledge. Curiously enough, the women-actors repelled me then
+ (as they do to this day) quite as strongly as I was attracted by
+ the men.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I used, also, to take great pleasure in watching men and boys in
+ swimming, but my opportunities for seeing them thus were
+ extremely rare. I never dared let my comrades know how I felt
+ about these matters, but the sight of a well-formed, naked youth
+ or man would fill me (and does now) with mingled feelings of
+ bashfulness, anguish, and delight. I used to tell myself endless
+ stories of a visionary castle inhabited by beautiful boys, one of
+ whom was especially my dear chum.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;It was always the <i>prince</i>, in fairy tales, who held my interest
+ or affection. I was constantly falling in love with handsome boys
+ whom I never knew; nor did I ever try to mix in their company,
+ for I was abashed before them, and had no liking nor aptitude for
+ boyish games. Sometimes I played with girls because they were
+ more quiet and gentler, but I cared for them little or not at
+ all.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;As is usually the case, my parents neglected to impart to me any
+ sexual knowledge, and such as I possessed was gathered furtively
+ from tainted sources, bad boys' talk at school and elsewhere. My
+ elders let me know, in a vague way, that talk of the kind was
+ wicked, and natural timidity and a wish to be 'good' kept me from
+ learning much about sexual matters. As I never went to
+ boarding-school, I was spared, perhaps, many of the degrading
+ initiations administered by knowing boys at such institutions.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;In spite of what has been said above, I do not believe that I
+ was sexually very precocious, and even now I feel that more
+ pleasure would ensue from merely contemplating than from personal
+ contact with the object of my amorous attentions.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;As I grew older there came, of course, an undefined physical
+ longing, but it was the <i>beauty</i> of those I admired which mainly
+ appealed to me. At the time of puberty I spontaneously acquired
+ the habit of masturbation. Once while bathing I found that a
+ pleasant feeling came with touching the sexual organs. It was not
+ long before I was confirmed in the habit. At first I practised it
+ but seldom, but afterward much more frequently (say, once a
+ week), though at times months have elapsed without any
+ indulgences on my part. I have only had erotic dreams three or
+ four times in my life. The masturbation habit I <a name='2_Page_113'></a>regard as
+ morally reprehensible and have made many resolutions to break it,
+ but without avail. It affords me only the most momentary
+ satisfaction, and is always followed by remorseful scruples.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I have never in my life had any sexual feeling for a woman, nor
+ any sexual connection with any woman whatsoever. The very thought
+ of such a thing is excessively repugnant and disgusting to me.
+ This is true, apart from any moral considerations, and I do not
+ think I could bring myself to it. I am not attracted by young
+ women in any way. Even their physical beauty has little or no
+ charm for me, and I often wonder how men can be so affected by
+ it. On the other hand, I am not a woman-hater, and have several
+ strong friends of the opposite sex. They are, however, women
+ older than myself, and our friendship is based solely on certain
+ intellectual or esthetic tastes we have in common.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I have had practically no physical relations with men; at any
+ rate, none specifically sexual. Once, when about 19 or 21, I
+ started to embrace a beautifully formed youth with whom I was
+ sleeping, but timidity and scruples got the better of my
+ feelings, and, as my bedfellow was not amorously inclined toward
+ me, nothing came of it. A few years after this I became strongly
+ attached to a friend whom I had already known for several years.
+ Circumstances threw us very much together during one summer. It
+ was now that I felt for the first time the full shock of love. He
+ returned my affection, but both of us were shy of showing our
+ feelings or speaking of them. Often when walking together after
+ night-fall we would put our arms about each other. Sometimes,
+ too, when sleeping together we would lie in close contact, and my
+ friend once suggested that I put my legs against his. He
+ frequently begged me to spend the night with him; but I began to
+ fear my feelings, and slept with him but seldom. We neither of us
+ had any definite ideas about homosexual relations, and, apart
+ from what I have related above, we had no further contact with
+ each other. A few months after our amorous feelings had developed
+ my friend died. His death caused me great distress, and my
+ naturally religious temperament began to manifest itself quite
+ strongly. At this time, too, I first read some writings of Mr.
+ Addington Symonds, and certain allusions in his work, coupled
+ with my recent experience, soon stirred me to a full
+ consciousness of my inverted nature.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;About eight months after my friend's death I happened to meet in
+ a strange town a youth of about my own age who exerted upon me a
+ strong and instant attraction. He possessed a refined, handsome
+ face, was gracefully built, and, though he was rather
+ undemonstrative, we soon became fast friends.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;We were together only for a few days, when I was obliged to
+ leave for my home, and the parting caused me great unhappiness
+ and depression.<a name='2_Page_114'></a> A few months after we spent a vacation together.
+ One day during our trip we went swimming, and undressed in the
+ same bathhouse. When I saw my friend naked for the first time he
+ seemed to me so beautiful that I longed to throw my arms about
+ him and cover him with kisses. I kept my feelings hidden,
+ however, hardly daring to look at him for fear of being unable to
+ restrain my desires. Several times afterward, in his room, I saw
+ him stripped, with the same effect upon my emotions. Until I had
+ seen him naked my feelings for him were not of a physical
+ character, but afterward I longed for actual contact, but only by
+ embraces and kisses. Though he was fond of me, he had absolutely
+ no amorous longings for me, and being a simple, pure-minded
+ fellow, would have loathed me for mine and my inverted nature. I
+ was careful never to let him discover it, and I was made very
+ unhappy when he confided that he was in love with a young girl
+ whom he wished to marry. This episode took place several years
+ ago, and though we are still friends my emotional feelings for
+ him have cooled considerably.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I have always been very shy of showing any affectionate
+ tendencies. Most of my acquaintances (and close friends even)
+ think me curiously cold, and often wonder why I have never fallen
+ in love or married. For obvious reasons I have never been able to
+ tell them.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;Three or four years ago a little book by Coventry Patmore fell
+ into my hands, and from its perusal resulted a strange blending
+ of my religious and erotic notions. The desire to love and be
+ loved is hard to drown, and, when I realized that homosexually it
+ was neither lawful nor possible for me to love in this world, I
+ began to project my longings into the next. By birth I am a Roman
+ Catholic, and in spite of a somewhat skeptical temper, manage to
+ remain one by conviction.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;From the doctrines of the Trinity, Incarnation, and Eucharist, I
+ have drawn conclusions which would fill the minds of the average
+ pietist with holy horror; nevertheless I believe that (granting
+ the premises) these conclusions are both logically and
+ theologically defensible. The Divinity of my fancied paradise
+ resembles in no way the vapid conceptions of Fra Angelico, or the
+ Quartier St. Sulpice. His physical aspect, at least, would be
+ better represented by some Praxitilean demigod or Flandrin's
+ naked, brooding boy.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;While these imaginings have caused me considerable moral
+ disquietude, they do not seem wholly reprehensible, because I
+ feel that the chief happiness I would derive by their realization
+ would be mainly from the contemplation of the loved one, rather
+ than from closer joys.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I possess only a slight knowledge of the history and particulars
+ of erotic mysticism, but it is likely that my notions are neither
+ new nor peculiar, and many utterances of the few mystical writers
+ with whose works I am acquainted seem substantially in accord
+ with my own longings <a name='2_Page_115'></a>and conclusions. In endeavoring to find for
+ them some sanction of valid authority, I have always sought
+ corroboration from members of my own sex; hence am less likely to
+ have fashioned my views after those of hypersensitive or
+ hysterical women.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;You will rightly infer that it is difficult for me to say
+ exactly how I regard (morally) the homosexual tendency. Of this
+ much, however, I am certain, that, even, if it were possible, I
+ would not exchange my inverted nature for a normal one. I suspect
+ that the sexual emotions and even inverted ones have a more
+ subtle significance than is generally attributed to them; but
+ modern moralists either fight shy of transcendental
+ interpretations or see none, and I am ignorant and unable to
+ solve the mystery these feelings seem to imply.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;Patmore speaks boldly enough, in his way, and Lacordaire has
+ hinted at things, but in a very guarded manner. I have neither
+ the ability nor opportunity to study what the mystics of the
+ Middle Ages have to say along these lines, and, besides, the
+ medieval way of looking at things is not congenial to me. The
+ chief characteristic of my tendency is an overpowering admiration
+ for male beauty, and in this I am more akin to the Greeks.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I have absolutely no words to tell you how powerfully such
+ beauty affects me. Moral and intellectual worth is, I know, of
+ greater value, but physical beauty I <i>see</i> more clearly, and it
+ appears to me the most <i>vivid</i> (if not the most perfect)
+ manifestation of the divine. A little incident may, perhaps,
+ reveal to you my feelings more completely. Not long ago I
+ happened to see an unusually well-formed young fellow enter a
+ house of assignation with a common woman of the streets. The
+ sight filled me with the keenest anguish, and the thought that
+ his beauty would soon be at the disposal of a prostitute made me
+ feel as if I were a powerless and unhappy witness to a sacrilege.
+ It may be that my rage for male loveliness is only another
+ outbreaking of the old Platonic mania, for as time goes on I find
+ that I long less for the actual youth before me, and more and
+ more for some ideal, perfect being whose bodily splendor and
+ loving heart are the realities whose reflections only we see in
+ this cave of shadows. Since the birth and development within me
+ of what, for lack of a better name, I term my homosexualized
+ Patmorean ideal, life has become, in the main, a weary business.
+ I am not despondent, however, because many things still hold for
+ me a certain interest. When that interest dies down, as it is
+ wont from time to time, I endeavor to be patient. God grant that,
+ after the end <i>here</i>, I may be drawn from the shadow, and
+ seemingly vain imaginings into the possession of their
+ never-ending reality <i>hereafter</i>.&quot;</p>
+
+
+<p> <b>HISTORY X.&mdash;</b>A. H., aged 62. Belongs to a family which cannot be
+ regarded as healthy, but there is no insanity among near
+ relations.<a name='2_Page_116'></a> Father a very virile man of high character and good
+ intelligence, but not sound physical health. Mother was
+ high-strung and nervous, but possessed of indomitable courage and
+ very affectionate; she lived very happily with her husband. She
+ became a chronic invalid and died of consumption. A. H. was a
+ seven months' child, the third in the family, who were born very
+ rapidly, so that there is only three years difference in the ages
+ of the first and third children. A. H. believes that one of his
+ brothers, who has never married and prefers men to women, is also
+ inverted, though not to the same degree as himself, and he also
+ suspects that a relation of his mother's may have been an invert.
+ Sister, who resembles the father in character, is married, but is
+ spoken of as a woman's woman rather than a man's woman. The
+ family generally are considered proud and reserved, but of
+ superior mental endowment.</p>
+
+<p> In early life A. H. was delicate and his studies were often
+ interrupted by illness. Though living under happy conditions he
+ was shy and nervous, often depressed. In later life his health
+ has been up to the average, and he has usually been able to
+ conceal his mental doubts and diffidence.</p>
+
+<p> As a child he played with dolls and made girls his companions
+ until an age when he grew conscious that his conduct was unusual
+ and became ashamed, while his father seemed troubled about him.
+ He regards himself as having been a very childish child.</p>
+
+<p> His conscious sexual life began between the ages of 8 and 10. He
+ was playing in the garden when he saw a manservant who had long
+ been with the family, standing at the door of a shed with his
+ penis exposed and erect. The boy had never seen anything of the
+ kind before, but felt great delight in the exhibition and moved
+ shyly toward the man, who retreated into the shed. The boy
+ followed and was allowed to caress and play with the penis until
+ ejaculation took place, the man replying, in reply to the child's
+ innocent inquiries, that it &quot;felt good.&quot; This experience was
+ frequently repeated with the same man, and the boy confided in a
+ boy friend, with whom he tried to ascertain by personal
+ experience what the &quot;good feeling&quot; was like, but they were too
+ young to derive any pleasure from the attempt beyond the joy of
+ what was instinctively felt to be &quot;eating forbidden fruit.&quot;</p>
+
+<p> From this period his sexual tendencies began to become fixed and
+ self-conscious. He has never at any period of life had a moment's
+ conscious sexual attraction toward a person of the opposite sex.
+ His warmest friendships have, indeed, been with women and much,
+ perhaps most, of the happiness he has enjoyed has been furnished
+ by those friendships. But passion has only been aroused by
+ persons of his own sex, generally by men much younger than
+ himself. He feels shy and <a name='2_Page_117'></a>uncomfortable in the presence of men
+ of his own age. But even at his present age, a touch of a man or
+ boy may cause the liveliest gratification.</p>
+
+<p> Shortly after the incident in boyhood, already narrated, A. H.
+ induced a little boy companion to go to a quiet spot, where, at
+ A. H.'s suggestion, each placed the other's penis in his mouth by
+ turns. A. H. had never heard of such a proceeding. It was a
+ natural instinct. He began to masturbate at an early age. But he
+ soon found a companion to share his passion. An older man,
+ especially, married and with a family, became his accomplice on
+ every possible opportunity, and they would manipulate each other.
+ At the age of 21, <i>fellatio</i> began to be practised with this man.
+ It became a lifelong practice, and the preferred method of sexual
+ gratification. He likes best to have it performed on himself, but
+ he has never asked anyone to do for him what he would not himself
+ do for the other if desired. There has never been <i>pedicatio</i>.
+ The penis, it may be added, is of good size, and the testicles
+ rather large.</p>
+
+<p> No one has ever suspected A. H.'s sexual perversion, not even his
+ physician, with whom he has long had a close friendship, until at
+ a time of great mental distress A. H. voluntarily revealed his
+ state. He is accustomed to refined society, has always read much,
+ abhorred athletic pursuits, and loved poetry, children, and
+ flowers. His love of nature amounts, indeed, to a passion.
+ Wherever he has been he has made friends among the best people.
+ He confesses to occasional periods of addiction to intoxicants,
+ induced by sociable companionship, and only controlled by force
+ of will.</p>
+
+<p> For business he has not the slightest aptitude, and cannot look
+ after his own affairs. He is always dreading poverty and
+ destitution. He believes, however, that he passes among his
+ friends as fairly capable.</p>
+
+<p> He considers that inversion is natural in his case and that he
+ has a perfect right to gratify his own natural instincts, though
+ he also admits they may be vices. He has never sought to
+ influence an innocent person toward his own tendencies.</p>
+
+
+<p> <b>HISTORY XI.&mdash;</b>T. D., knows of nothing abnormal in his ancestry. His
+ brother has homosexual tendencies, but is also attracted to
+ women. A sister, who is very religious, states that she has
+ little or no sexual inclinations. They were all of a dreamy
+ disposition when young, to the disgust of their teachers. He sent
+ the following account of himself from the University at the age
+ of 20:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p> &quot;When I was a child (before I went to school at 9),&quot; he writes,
+ &quot;I was already of an affectionate disposition, an affection
+ turned readily to either sex. No boy was the cause of my
+ inclinations, which were quite spontaneous. (No doubt, part of
+ the cause may be found in our social system, by which ladies are
+ rather drawing-room creatures to be treated <a name='2_Page_118'></a>with distant
+ respect.) When I was 10, at a preparatory school, I first began
+ to form attachments with other boys of my own age, in which I
+ always had regard to physical beauty. It is this stage, in which
+ the sexual element is latent, that Shelley speaks of as preceding
+ love in ardent natures.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;At 12 I learned masturbation, apparently by instinct, and, I
+ regret to say, practised it to excess for the next seven years,
+ always secretly and with shame, and often with the accompaniment
+ of prurient imaginings which did not prevent my relations with
+ those I loved being of a very spiritual nature. Masturbation was
+ often practised daily, with bursts of repentance and abstinence,
+ latterly more rarely. But until I was 15 I really knew nothing of
+ sexual matters, and it was not till I was at least 17 that I was
+ conscious of sexual desire, which I repressed with shame.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;Owing to excessive self-abuse, I am unable to emit except
+ manually, but desire is strong. I think naked contact would
+ suffice, and in any case intercrural connection. <i>Pedicatio</i> and
+ <i>fellatio</i> I abhor. I love boys between the ages of 12 and 15;
+ they must be of my own class, refined, and lovable. I only desire
+ the active masculine part. I now regard my inclinations as
+ natural and normal to me. The difficulty is that of leading the
+ other party to regard it as such, besides the young age required
+ and clandestine nature of proceedings necessary. The moral
+ difficulties of circumstances are so strong that I have little
+ hope of ever gratifying my passion fully. I have found myself
+ deceived in the character of the boy twice. The last friendship
+ lasted three years, during which time I only saw him naked two or
+ three times (this caused erection), never touched him pruriently,
+ and only kissed him once.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I have never found a satisfactory object of my affections, and
+ my happiness, perhaps my health, have been seriously injured. At
+ my public school a master helped me to a truer understanding of
+ these things. The merely animal sodomy which exists in many
+ public schools was unknown. What I learned of sex I learned for
+ myself. I am recommended to turn my aspirations to the abstract
+ universal maid; but so far at least I cannot do it.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;Male Greek statuary and the <i>Ph&oelig;drus</i> of Plato have had
+ a great, though only confirmatory, influence on my feelings. My
+ ideal is that of Theocritus XIII, wherein Hercules was bringing
+ Hylas to the perfect measure of a man. My first thought is the
+ good of my friend, but, except for the good subjective influence
+ of passion, I have failed utterly.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I am very tall, dark, rather strong, fond of games, though I do
+ not excel, owing to short sight. I am English, though I have
+ French blood, which may account for an unreservedly passionate
+ disposition. Though unlike other people, I am not in the least
+ feminine, nor has anyone thought so to my knowledge. I can
+ whistle easily and well. I am so <a name='2_Page_119'></a>masculine that I cannot even
+ conceive of passive sexual pleasure in women, much less in men.
+ (That is one of the difficulties in boy-love.) My affections are
+ inextricably bound up in the ideals of protection of one weaker
+ than myself. In the earlier days, when sexuality was less
+ conscious, this was a great source of romantic feeling, the
+ glamour of which is rather departing. I cannot understand love of
+ adult males, much less if they are of lower class, and the idea
+ of prostitution is nauseous to me.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I think I may say that I have the esthetic and moral sense very
+ strongly ingrained. Indeed, they are largely synonymous with me.
+ I have no dramatic aptitude, and, though I flatter myself that my
+ taste is good in music, I have no knowledge of music. If I have a
+ favorite color, it is a dark crimson or blue, of the nature of
+ old stained glass. I derive great pleasure from all literary and
+ pictorial art and architecture; indeed, art of all kinds. I have
+ facility in writing personal lyrical verse; it affords me relief.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I think my inversion must be congenital, as the desire of
+ contact with those boys I loved began before masturbation and has
+ lasted through private and public resorts and into university
+ life. The other sex does not attract me, but I am very fond of
+ children, girls as well as boys. (If there is sexuality in this,
+ which I trust there is not, it is latent).&quot;</p>
+
+<p> This statement is of interest because it may well lead us to
+ suppose that the writer, who is of balanced mind and sound
+ judgment, possesses a confirmed homosexual outlook on life.
+ While, however, it is the rule for the permanent direction of the
+ sexual impulse to be decided by the age of 20, that age is too
+ early to permit us to speak positively, especially in a youth
+ whose adolescent undifferentiated or homosexual impulses are
+ fostered by university life. This proved to be! the case with
+ T. D., who, though doubtless possessing a psychically anomalous
+ strain, is yet predominantly masculine. On leaving the university
+ his heterosexuality asserted itself normally. About six years
+ after the earlier statement, he wrote that he had fallen in love.
+ &quot;I am on the eve of marrying a girl of nearly my own age. She has
+ sympathy as well as knowledge in my fields of study; it was thus
+ easier for me to explain my past, and I found that she could not
+ understand the moral objections to homosexual practices. My own
+ opinion always was that the moral objections were very
+ considerable, but might in some cases be overcome. In any case I
+ have entirely lost my sexual attraction toward boys; though I am
+ glad to say that the appreciation of their charm and grace
+ remains. My instincts, therefore, have undergone a considerable
+ change, but the change is not entirely in the direction of
+ normality. The instinct for sodomy in the proper sense of the
+ word used to be unintelligible to me; since the object of
+ attraction has become a woman this instinct is mixed with the
+ normal in my desire.<a name='2_Page_120'></a> Further, an element which much troubled me,
+ as being most foreign to my ideal feelings, has not quite left
+ me&mdash;the indecent and often scatologic curiosity about immature
+ girls. I can only hope that the realization of the normal in
+ marriage may finally kill these painful aberrations. I should add
+ that the practice of masturbation has been abandoned.&quot;</p>
+
+
+<p> <b>HISTORY XII.&mdash;</b>Aged 24. Father and mother both living; the latter
+ is of a better social standing than the father. He is much
+ attached to his mother, and she gives him some sympathy. He has a
+ brother who is normally attracted to women. He himself has never
+ been attracted to women, and takes no interest in them nor in
+ their society.</p>
+
+<p> At the age of 4 he first became conscious of an attraction for
+ older males. From the ages of 11 and 19, at a large
+ grammar-school, he had relationships with about one hundred boys.
+ Needless to add, he considers homosexuality extremely common in
+ schools. It was, however, the Oscar Wilde case which first opened
+ his eyes to the wide prevalence of homosexuality, and he
+ considers that the publicity of that case has done much, if not
+ to increase homosexuality, at all events to make it more
+ conspicuous and outspoken.</p>
+
+<p> He is now attracted to youths about 5 or 6 years younger than
+ himself; they must be good-looking. He has never perverted a boy
+ not already inclined to homosexuality. In his relationship he
+ does not feel exclusively like a male or a female: sometimes one,
+ sometimes the other. He is often liked, he says, because of his
+ masculine character.</p>
+
+<p> He is fully developed and healthy, well over middle height,
+ inclined to be plump, with full face and small moustache. He
+ smokes many cigarettes and cannot get on without them. Though his
+ manners are very slightly if at all feminine, he acknowledges
+ many feminine ways. He is fond of jewelry, until lately always
+ wore a bangle, and likes women's rings; he is very particular
+ about fine ties, and uses very delicate women's handkerchiefs. He
+ has always had a taste for music, and sings. He has a special
+ predilection for green; it is the predominant color in the
+ decoration of his room, and everything green appeals to him. He
+ finds that the love of green (and also of violet and purple) is
+ very widespread among his inverted friends.</p>
+
+
+<p> <b>HISTORY XIII.&mdash;</b>Artist, aged 34. &quot;The earliest sex impression that
+ I am conscious of,&quot; he writes, &quot;is at the age of 9 or 10 falling
+ in love with a handsome boy who must have been about two years my
+ senior. I do not recollect ever having spoken to him, but my
+ desire, so far as I can recall, was that he should seize hold of
+ and handle me. I have a distinct impression yet of how
+ pleasurable even physical pain or cruelty would have been at his
+ hands. (I have noticed that in young children <a name='2_Page_121'></a>it is often
+ difficult to differentiate the sexual emotions from what in the
+ grown up would be definite cruelty.)</p>
+
+<p> &quot;It must have been at about this time that I discovered&mdash;entirely
+ by myself&mdash;the act of masturbation. The process grew up quite
+ naturally, though I cannot but think that the cooped-up life in a
+ London street and a London school, with want of physical
+ exercise, as well as want of landscape, color, and beautiful
+ form, had much to do with it. The tone of the school I was at was
+ singularly clean, but I question whether the vaunted cleanliness
+ of tone of day-schools can compensate for the open life and large
+ discipline of an English public school.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;How far the rather frequent masturbation between the ages of 10
+ and 13 may have had to do with weakly health I do not know, but
+ when I was 12 I was taken by my mother to a famous doctor. He
+ made no inquiries of a sexual nature, but he advised that I
+ should be sent away from London. He had a sentimental horror of
+ violent games, etc., for boys, and put aside various suggested
+ public schools. Finally I was sent to a private school at the
+ seaside.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;The private school was clean and wholesome. The plunge into the
+ sexual cocytus of the great public school that followed was
+ effectually sudden. In my day &mdash;&mdash; was a perfect stew of
+ uncleanness. There was plenty of incontinence, not much cruelty,
+ no end of dirty conversation, and a great deal of genuine
+ affection, even to heroism, shown among the boys in their
+ relations to one another. All these things were treated by
+ masters and boys alike as more or less unholy, with the result
+ that they were either sought after or flung aside, according to
+ the sexual or emotional instinct of each. No attempt was made at
+ discrimination. A kiss was as unclean as the act of <i>fellatio</i>,
+ and no one had any gauge or principle whatever on which to guide
+ the cravings of boyhood.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;My first initiation into the mysteries of sex was at the hands
+ of the dormitory servant, who showed me his penis when he woke me
+ in the mornings, and masturbated me when he gave me my hot bath
+ on a Saturday night. This old reprobate of 45 committed the act
+ of <i>fellatio</i> with most of the boys in turn as he went the
+ dormitory rounds. For the older lads I cannot speak, but over us
+ younger ones of 14 and 15 he exercised a sort of unholy terror
+ and fascination. He was very popular; we came to him like doves
+ to a snake. When I revisited my old school many years later he
+ was occupying a very responsible position in the college chapel,
+ and I noticed that he wore that expression of sly reverence which
+ I think I can now instantly detect when I see it in a man.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;For the rest the dormitory was boisterous and lewd, and there
+ was a good deal of bullying, which probably did little harm. My
+ principal recollection now is of the filthy mystery of foul talk,
+ that I neither cared for nor understood. What I really needed,
+ like all the other boys, was a <a name='2_Page_122'></a>little timely help over the
+ sexual problems, but this we none of us got, and each had to work
+ out his own principle of conduct for himself. It was a long,
+ difficult, and wasteful process, and I cannot but believe that
+ many of us failed in the endeavor. We had come unprepared with
+ any advice. The principle upon which we were apparently trained
+ was the repression of every instinct. My mother was ignorant from
+ innocence, my father from indifference, and so between them I was
+ sent out helpless. A mother incurs great responsibility in
+ sending her child away unprepared. A parent should not seek to
+ shift his responsibility upon the schoolmaster. Love alone should
+ be the fount from which revelations should flow; the master, from
+ the very nature of his position, cannot reveal.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;An imminent breakdown in health&mdash;due, it would now appear, to
+ quite obvious causes&mdash;relieved me from the purgatory of the
+ college dormitory, and I was removed to one of the private
+ houses. These establishments were considered more select and less
+ 'rough.' The social atmosphere was, however, perhaps more
+ unwholesome, because more effeminate, and was full of noble young
+ sucklings. The nominal head of the house under normal conditions
+ might have been a real leader; as it was, the real head of the
+ house was a gilded young pariah, fairly low down in the school
+ and full of hypocrisy and unnatural lusts. The boy who occupied
+ the cubicle next to mine was also a bad case of sexual
+ misdirection, though he had not the social distinction to make
+ him quite so refined a terror. I had every opportunity of
+ watching him until, two years later, he was fortunately asked to
+ leave. He talked bawd from morning till night, got drunk on one
+ or two occasions, masturbated constantly without concealment, had
+ several of the younger boys <i>inter femora</i>, though without
+ evincing any care or affection for them, and gave one the
+ impression of having been born for a brothel. His one redeeming
+ quality was an element of good nature: a characteristic one often
+ finds among such as are selfish and irresponsible. I have since
+ been told that he has gone completely to the dogs. Whether this
+ young cub's sexual instincts could have been turned or guided I
+ do not know; but in a rougher and simpler life than that of a
+ public school, in a more open and less hypocritical atmosphere,
+ he might, perhaps, have been licked into better shape. Hypocrisy
+ is a vice, however, that schoolboys themselves are fortunately
+ free from. It comes later. The tone among the boys was frankly
+ and violently unclean, though unclean not from instinct, but from
+ want of direction and from repression.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I have not a single happy recollection of this period of my
+ school life. Yet out of this morass of misbegotten virtues I
+ plucked my first blossom of genuine affection. I call it a
+ blossom because it never ripened even to flower. I had been given
+ the extreme of filth to feed upon at <a name='2_Page_123'></a>the outset, and now I found
+ for myself the extreme of chastity. It will be a matter of
+ lifelong regret to me that the love which was the lodestar of my
+ school years was never fulfilled or set upon a sound basis of
+ comradeship.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;When I was about 16&frac12; years old there came into the house a boy
+ about two years younger than myself, and who became the absorbing
+ thought of my school days. I do not remember a moment, from the
+ time I first saw him to the time I left school, that I was not in
+ love with him, and the affection was reciprocated, if somewhat
+ reservedly. He was always a little ahead of me in books and
+ scholarship, but as our affection ripened we spent most of our
+ spare time together, and he received my advances much as a girl
+ who is being wooed, a little mockingly, perhaps, but with real
+ pleasure. He allowed me to fondle and caress him, but our
+ intimacy never went further than a kiss, and about that even was
+ the slur of shame; there was always a barrier between us, and we
+ never so much as whispered to one another concerning those things
+ of which all the school obscenely talked. Any connection between
+ our own emotions and the sexual morals of the school never
+ occurred to us. In fact, we lived a dream-life of chastity that
+ could not relate itself to any human conditions. This was
+ suddenly broken in upon. My friend was very beautiful and an
+ object of attraction to others. That some of the elder boys had
+ made offers of sexual intercourse to him I knew, but to him, as
+ to me, that was unspeakable wickedness. One day I heard that four
+ or five of these suitors of his had mishandled him; they had, I
+ believe, taken off his trousers and attempted to masturbate him.
+ The offense was probably horse play of an animal nature; to me it
+ seemed an unpardonable offense. The matter had been reported to
+ the master by a servant, but confirmatory evidence was needed
+ before punishment could follow. I was torn asunder by passions I
+ could not then analyze and in the end committed the greatest of
+ schoolboy crimes,&mdash;I sneaked. The action under the circumstances
+ was courageous, but I was indifferent so long as the boy I loved
+ judged me rightly. The result was that at the close of the term
+ four or five of the senior boys were 'asked to leave.' The
+ remaining brief period of my school life, which had previously
+ been a living hell, became really happy. That this should have
+ been brought about to the harm of four or five boys whose sin,
+ after all, was but a misdirected impulse for which the system was
+ responsible, seems to me now all very wrong. Of the boys sent
+ away, however, certainly three have made honorable careers. For
+ my friend and I, we became more afraid of each other than before;
+ as our affections increased, so our fear of them increased also.
+ The friendship was too ethereal to live; but even yet we still
+ have a deep respect for one another.</p><a name='2_Page_124'></a>
+
+<p> &quot;When at the age of 19 I left school I was allowed to knock about
+ for a year before entering college. During this time I picked up
+ a sexual experience that may or may not have been a valuable one,
+ I certainly look back upon it now, with regret, if not with
+ horror. My father had discovered, some months before this date,
+ that I was in the habit of masturbating, and he gave me what he
+ conceived to be the right counsel under the circumstances: 'If
+ you do this,' he said, 'you will never be able to use your penis
+ with a woman. Therefore your best plan will be to go with a
+ prostitute. Should you do this, however, you will probably pick
+ up a beastly disease. Therefore the safest way would be to do it
+ abroad if you get the chance, for there the houses are licensed.'
+ Having delivered himself of this advice he troubled himself no
+ further in the matter, but left me to work out my own destiny.
+ The great physician, to whom I was taken about this time, also
+ gave me his advice on this point. 'Masturbation,' he said, 'is
+ death. A number of young men come to me with the same story. I
+ tell them they are killing themselves, and you will kill
+ yourself, too.' The doctor's hope was apparently to frighten his
+ young patients into what he conceived to be natural conditions of
+ life, and one went away from him with the impression that every
+ sexual manifestation in one's self was a physical infirmity, due
+ to one's own moral weakness. It took me some time before I could
+ make up my mind to follow my father's advice, but after a period
+ of real moral agony I deliberately and entirely in cold blood
+ acted upon it. I sought out a scarlet woman in the streets of
+ &mdash;&mdash; and went home with her. From something she said to me I know
+ that I gave her pleasure, and she asked me to come to her again.
+ This I did twice, but without any real pleasure. The whole thing
+ was too sordid and soulless, and the man who decides to take an
+ evil medicine regularly has first to make up his mind that he
+ really needs it.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;At about the same time I chanced to be, for a few months, in a
+ German university town, and I determined, as I had the
+ opportunity, to carry the parental advice to the logical
+ conclusion. I tried a licensed house. The place was clean and
+ decent, and the conditions, I take it, such as one would normally
+ find in any properly regulated continental city; but to me the
+ whole thing appeared unspeakably horrible. It was a purely
+ commercial transaction, and it had not even the redeeming element
+ of risk to one's self, or of offense against a social or
+ disciplinary code. I came away feeling that I had touched bottom
+ in my sexual experiences, and I understood what it was that Faust
+ saw when the red mouse sprang from the mouth of the witch in the
+ Walpurgis dance.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;These were the only occasions upon which I have had sexual
+ intercourse with women. Looking back to them now, they appear to
+ me to have been almost inevitable; but if I had my life over
+ again I would <a name='2_Page_125'></a>shun them as I would a lethal draught. I believe I
+ came out of the fire unscathed; probably, indeed, it did me good,
+ in the sense that it made it possible for me to look deeper into
+ life; though to what extent seeing the torments of the damned
+ makes us do this, perhaps only a Dante could tell. To gain
+ knowledge at the expense of the shame and misery of others I hold
+ to be fundamentally wrong and immoral. What is to me, however,
+ the chief and bitterest thought is that I flung away the first
+ spring of manhood where I got no love in return. His virginity
+ is, or should be, as glorious and sacred a possession to a youth
+ as to a maiden; to be guarded jealously; to be given only at the
+ call of love, to one who loves him&mdash;be it comrade, mistress, or
+ wife&mdash;and whom he can love in return.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;The full university life into which I now entered at the age of
+ 20 brought with it a flood of new ideas, feelings and sensations.
+ The friendships I made there will always remain the central ones
+ in my life. Up to my last term at college at the age of 24 I
+ still wore my chain-mail of artificial chastity; but then a
+ change gradually set in, and I began to understand the
+ relationship of the physical phenomena of sex to its intellectual
+ and imaginative manifestations. (I was not destined to fully
+ realize this for some years and then exclusively through and out
+ of my own personal experience.) It was the study of Walt
+ Whitman's <i>Leaves of Grass</i> that first brought me light upon this
+ question. Hitherto I had kept the two things locked up, as it
+ were, in two separate air-tight compartments,&mdash;my friendships in
+ one, my sex instincts in another,&mdash;to be kept under and repressed
+ by the public-school code as I conceived it.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;It is needless to say that I was continually troubled by the
+ customary sex phenomena: erotic dreams, loss of semen,
+ troublesome erections at night, etc. These I repressed as best I
+ could, by habitual masturbation and by the regular diet and
+ exercise which academic life made possible. At one time, for the
+ period of a year I should say, I tried to overcome the desire for
+ masturbation by gradual stages, on the principle of the
+ drunkard's cure by which he took every day less tipple by the
+ insertion of one pebble more in his bottle. I marked on my
+ calendar the erotic dreams and the nights on which I masturbated,
+ and sought gradually to extend the intervening periods. Six
+ weeks, however, was the longest time for which I was able to
+ abstain.&quot;</p>
+
+<p> A few years later the writer of this communication formed an
+ intimate relationship (in which he did not make the first
+ advances) with a youth, some years younger than himself and of
+ lower social class, whose development he was able to assist. &quot;But
+ for my part,&quot; he remarks, &quot;I owe him as much as I gave him, for
+ his love lighted up the gold of affection that was in me and
+ consumed the dross. It was from him that I first learned that
+ there was no such thing as a hard-and-fast line between <a name='2_Page_126'></a>the
+ physical and the spiritual in friendship.&quot; This relationship
+ lasted for some years, when the young man married; its effects
+ are described as very beneficial to both parties; all the sexual
+ troubles vanished, together with the desire to masturbate.
+ &quot;Everything in life began to sing with joy, and what little of
+ real creative work I may have done I attribute largely to the
+ power of work that was born in me during those years.&quot;</p>
+
+
+<p> <b>HISTORY XIV.&mdash;</b>Scotchman, aged 38. His paternal ancestors were
+ normal, so far as he knows. His mother belonged to a very
+ eccentric old Celtic family. Soon after 5 he became so enamored
+ of a young shepherd that the boy had to be sent away. He
+ practised masturbation many years before the age of puberty, and
+ attaches importance to this as a factor in the evolution of his
+ homosexual life.</p>
+
+<p> He has had erotic dreams rarely about men, about women more
+ frequently. While indifferent to women, he has no repulsion
+ toward them. He has had connection with women two or three times,
+ but without experiencing the same passionate emotions as with
+ men.</p>
+
+<p> He would like a son, but he has never been able to get up the
+ necessary amount of passion to lead to marriage.</p>
+
+<p> He has always had a sentimental and Platonic affection for men.
+ Of late years he has formed two friendships with adults of an
+ affectionate and also erotic character. He cares little for
+ anything beyond mutual masturbation and kissing; what he desires
+ is the love of the male.</p>
+
+<p> In appearance there is nothing abnormal about him except an air
+ of youth. He is vigorous both in body and mind, and has enormous
+ power of resisting fatigue. He is an excellent man of business.
+ Is a patient student. He sees no harm in his homosexual passions.
+ He is averse to promiscuity. His ideal is a permanent union which
+ includes sexual relations.</p>
+
+
+<p> <b>HISTORY XV.&mdash;</b>T. S., artist, aged 32. &quot;I was born in England. My
+ father was a Jew, the first to marry out of his family and to
+ marry a Christian. My great-grandparents were cousins; he was a
+ German and she was a Dane. My grandparents were also cousins; he
+ was a Swede and she was a Dane.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;My maternal grandfather was an English Protestant, and my
+ maternal grandmother was Irish, fanatically Roman Catholic, and a
+ very eccentric woman.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;In my father's family there have been many members of note. In
+ my mother's family there were many renowned lawyers.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;My father had an elder brother who was homosexual. He was
+ already, at 31 years of age, a prominent author, when he died of
+ consumption. I have also a second cousin on my father's side who
+ is a <a name='2_Page_127'></a>very good tenor; he is also homosexual. In my mother's
+ family I know of nothing abnormal.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;In neither family is there or has there been any insanity, but
+ rather an overwealth of brain.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;My parents were an ideally happy couple. They were engaged after
+ knowing each other six days, and after being separated three
+ months they married. They were married thirty-five years without
+ a quarrel. I have a brother three years older, born a year after
+ their marriage, and a sister seven years younger.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;My brother takes after his father in appearance. He is a great
+ lover of women and much spoiled by them. He is quite normal and
+ abstemious.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;My sister is a very womanly woman. As a girl she disapproved
+ very much of girl friendships and always confided in her mother.
+ At 13 years of age she met the man she is now married to. They
+ waited ten years before marrying and are now an ideally happy
+ couple. My sister is perfectly normal and very abstemious.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I lived my first ten years in England, eighteen years in Sweden,
+ two years in Denmark, two years in Bavaria, Austria, and Italy,
+ and am now living in Berlin. I consider myself English. I am
+ mentally a man, but all my physical feelings and desires are
+ those of a woman.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I am middle height and very slight. Weigh 106 English pounds,
+ without clothes. My hands and feet are small and well-shaped.
+ Head of normal size. Features small. Eyes green. Have worn
+ glasses since I was 7 years old. Complexion fair. Appearance not
+ Jewish. The skin of my body is very white, without blemish. Very
+ little hair on my face. Hair on head and abdomen luxuriant. No
+ hair whatever on stomach and chest. Color of hair auburn
+ everywhere except below navel, that black. (My father's,
+ mother's, and brother's hair was brown. My sister has auburn
+ hair, and so had the aforementioned uncle.) My breasts are
+ slightly round; my hips are normal. I do not gesticulate much.
+ From my material self it would be difficult to draw the
+ conclusion that I was homosexual. My sexual organs are normal.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;My disposition is apparently bright, but in reality melancholy.
+ Have very little love for human nature, but have a partiality for
+ the British and Jewish races. Hate business, politics, sports,
+ and society. Love music, art, literature, and nature. Deep
+ interest in mysticism. Am clairvoyant. Have been used many times
+ as a medium. Lead two separate lives, an outer and inner psychic
+ life. Am a fatalist and a theosophist. Profound belief in
+ reincarnation, always have had, because when I was a little child
+ I could 'remember' so much. Have an excellent memory, dating back
+ to my third year. Have always been too self-analytical. Have from
+ my earliest childhood felt myself <a name='2_Page_128'></a>an alien. Am very sensitive,
+ physically and psychically. Have no wish to wear woman's clothing
+ or do woman's work. As to clothes for myself, I prefer black and
+ not much jewelry.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I could only love a perfectly manly man from 21 to 40 years of
+ age. He must be physically beautiful and well made. Size of
+ sexual organs plays no part. The muscles must be developed and
+ the hands must be especially well shaped. Hands are my fetish. (I
+ could never love anyone with ugly hands.) He must have no odor
+ issuing from his body (though I do not dislike faint perfume when
+ clothed), and, above all, never have a bad breath. He must be
+ intelligent, love music, art, literature, and nature. He must be
+ refined and cultured and have been about the world. He must have
+ simplicity in behavior, dress, and manner, and, above all, be
+ clean-bodied as clean-minded. Cynicism I cannot stand. (Here I
+ may state I once owned a St. Bernard dog which reminded me much
+ of my ideal. He was always sedate, always loving, and faithful;
+ generally quiet. He only got excited when out in the elements.) I
+ have not been able to get on with people who have no sense of
+ humor. From my birth I was physically weak. First I suffered from
+ eczema. Being born with a double squint, I was operated on at 2&frac12;
+ and again at 3&frac12; years of age, with excellent result. From 4 to 12
+ years of age I had convulsions (often), and all the illnesses of
+ childhood. At the age of 12&frac12; years I took scarlet fever, followed
+ by a weak heart, which grew stronger after a year, and Bright's
+ disease, which lasted fifteen years with hardly a break. This
+ illness had its wonted effect of producing melancholia and
+ upsetting the whole nervous system. Bright's disease stopped
+ suddenly but was followed by a succession of illnesses. Then I
+ had neuritis very badly. I then removed to Bavaria, and to regain
+ nervous strength I was treated by Freud's psychoanalytical
+ method, with great success. I had a very bad relapse, as my
+ brother, who had just heard I was homosexual, came to visit me
+ and threatened to have me put under guardians, if my father
+ should die. It took me weeks to recover from the shock. We broke
+ off all intercourse and though my brother has been several times
+ in the same town where I have been, we remain strangers. At this
+ time my father died suddenly. Last spring four suicides of
+ friends in so many weeks had a very bad effect on my nerves. I am
+ now in Berlin in better spirits, but the cramp continues badly at
+ times.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;To this I must add that since my fourteenth year, independent of
+ any illness, I have suffered mentally and physically from
+ menstrual pains recurring every twenty-eight days and lasting
+ from six to eight days. That these were the equivalent pains to a
+ woman's menstruation periods I could get no doctor to admit till
+ I was treated for a length of time by a German nerve specialist.</p><a name='2_Page_129'></a>
+
+<p> &quot;The physical pains begin abruptly. Sudden congestions of blood
+ in the brain and in the abdomen. Sudden perspirations, heat and
+ cold. Great nervous pains in the small of the back, also in the
+ nerve-centers of abdomen and stomach. Sharp, shooting pains in
+ the breasts and especially the nipples. Sudden toothache which
+ stops as suddenly. The skin becomes darker, sometimes mottled. I
+ have the whole time a taste of blood in my mouth and often
+ everything I eat tastes of blood. I have great difficulty at that
+ time in eating meat. Physical longings for erotic adventure,
+ counterbalanced by mental nausea at the bare idea.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;The mental symptoms are: sudden feeling of deep depression,
+ suicidal tendencies, alternating with sudden inexplicable
+ lightheartedness. Capriciousness and great dissatisfaction with
+ myself and life generally. Horror at my own incompleteness of sex
+ and sudden fits of hatred toward women and a great longing to be
+ loved by men. This condition changes slowly back to the normal
+ one. It takes several days for me to lose my physical weakness
+ owing to it.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;Physically I was developed at 16 years of age. Mentally I was
+ developed at a very early age, but I kept my inner life quite
+ dark, always playing the innocent. Nobody at home believed me to
+ know anything about life. They were at times very surprised when
+ I fell out of the r&ocirc;le I had planned for myself. Up till I was 17
+ years of age nothing to do with other people's morals was ever
+ discussed before me. I looked so pure, and do now, that people
+ are always careful in front of me. My father never discussed such
+ things with me. From my earliest childhood I loved men dearly,
+ though I was always at daggers drawn with my father and brother.
+ I worshipped my mother then, as I do now. My sister and I did not
+ at all get on as children, though we are the best of friends now.
+ She and her husband as well as my mother have been kindness
+ itself ever since they knew of my condition. Not till I was over
+ 30 years did I meet a man I loved as well as my mother, and he is
+ heterosexual. I must have loved my father and brother at first,
+ but continual conflicts, incompatible temperaments and mutual
+ misunderstandings and want of sympathy made life at home
+ horrible. I must admit from my earliest childhood I had a certain
+ contempt for my father and brother because I found them so
+ materialistic. I had all my childhood rows with my brother. My
+ father took his part, my mother mine. After I had recovered from
+ my father's sudden death (my first words were after reading the
+ letter: 'Thank God it isn't mother!') I felt a great relief, but
+ it took a long time for me to grasp that I was really free.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I have always liked women's society and, as a youth, I was very
+ fond of gossip, which I by no means am now. I have many women
+ friends, more than men friends. These women friends are all
+ heterosexual <a name='2_Page_130'></a>except one. I very often like elderly women; I
+ suppose I see mother in such women. A woman never could make me
+ blush, but a man I admired could easily.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I was 23 years of age when a married woman of good family asked
+ me to come and spend the night with her. I went, and though she
+ was beautifully built, cleanly, and though her garments and
+ apartments were of the utmost good taste, I did not have any
+ erection. On the other hand, I felt myself to be most unclean and
+ bathed three times each of the following three days. Since then I
+ have never tried to have sexual intercourse with women.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;In Copenhagen I tried to excite my feelings with every class of
+ woman, in vain. I suppose it is that my nature is so like woman's
+ that there can be no reaction. With men I am often very shy and
+ nervous, tongue-tied, and my hands perspire. Never so with women.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;As a child I loved men and used to fall desperately in love with
+ some who came to the house. I would, when no one was there, kiss
+ their hats, or gloves, or even their sticks.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I can remember, when I was about 6 years, how I fell in love
+ with a very good-looking 26-year-old German. He had very curly
+ hair and his hands were very beautiful. He was very fond of me
+ and I used to call him 'my Boy.' When visiting us he often used
+ to 'tuck me in' after the nurse had gone down. He always had
+ sweets or something for me. I can remember how I used to fling my
+ arms round his neck and cover his face with kisses. I would then
+ draw his head down on my pillow and he would tell me fairy-tales
+ and I would go off to sleep quite happy.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;At 7 years of age, while staying in the country, a very
+ good-looking groom, about 25 years of age, misbehaved himself
+ with me. I often used to visit him in the stables, as this man
+ had a strange attraction for me. One day he tickled me. While
+ doing so he produced my penis and also his own, which was in full
+ erection. He tried in every way to excite my feelings, in vain.
+ For him the occasion terminated in an ejaculation. He forbade me
+ to tell anyone, and I did not do so, but tried to find out all I
+ could on the subject, with little or no result. From that day I
+ hated the groom and I felt a sort of guilt, as if I had 'lost
+ something.' Not till I was 12 years did I understand.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;From my earliest childhood I had one ideal of a man. From that
+ ideal I have never swerved. At the age of 30 I found a friend
+ who, though quite heterosexual, has, without giving me any sexual
+ intercourse, given me the love I have always needed. He has been
+ for the last couple of years a second mother, father, sister,
+ brother, and lover. Through him I have regained my health, my
+ love of nature, and he has helped to deaden my hatred toward
+ human nature and my bitterness.<a name='2_Page_131'></a> A better friend I never wish to
+ find. It has made up for all the years of mental and physical
+ suffering. One strange thing is that the feeling is mutual. He
+ has had a tragic life, for his wife, whom he loved beyond
+ everything, died under very sad circumstances. He says I am the
+ best male friend he has ever had. While with him, much of the
+ lower nature in me was stamped out. I shall always look upon him
+ as the turning point in my life. I think he wrought some of his
+ finest influence through his music. He played Beethoven and
+ Wagner for me for a couple of hours every day for months, and
+ thus opened up a new world to me.... He is six years older than I
+ am.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;At 10 years of age we moved to Sweden, a country I hated from
+ first to last. About this time I began to notice that there was
+ something strange about myself. I felt myself an alien, and have
+ done so ever since. An event of importance in my life was, I feel
+ sure, when my father's sister tried to take away my mother's
+ character. It was done in jealousy and spite, and my aunt had to
+ beg my parents' pardon. Outwardly the affair was patched up; but
+ I feel sure my father never really forgave his sister. Jews never
+ forgive.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;This event awoke in me a great hatred toward women, and it was
+ many years before I could at all control it.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;At the age of 14 I was much with a good-looking, musical
+ American, a year older than myself. One day, while romping, very
+ much the same thing occurred as with the groom. I still had no
+ sexual feelings. We remained good friends. I often wished to kiss
+ him. After the first time he would not allow it. He was very much
+ liked among the officers and so-called high society men, and had
+ always much money. About ten years later I heard he used to
+ accept money after intimate intercourse with those society men.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;During my fifteenth year I had great longing for sexual
+ intercourse with men. At this time the first signs of hair were
+ to be seen on my abdomen.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;At the age of 16 a gardener, a married man with family,
+ initiated me into mutual self-abuse. He lived in the back house
+ of the apartment house we then inhabited. He was about 40 years
+ of age, an ugly but muscularly developed man. These practices
+ took place in the cellar, to which there were three entrances. I
+ never allowed him to kiss me and the sight of his children always
+ awoke in me a great feeling of nausea. That was the natural
+ reaction of a bad conscience. For the man himself I had the
+ utmost contempt. This man told me of several parks and <i>pissoirs</i>
+ where men met, and I went to these places now and again for
+ erotic adventure.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I must here relate that at the age of 16 my mother warned me
+ against self-abuse. It had the opposite effect, made me curious,
+ so I <a name='2_Page_132'></a>began at once. I have continued ever since, at least once a
+ day. (I have never had an involuntary emission in my whole life.)
+ Between 17 and 22 it became necessary for me to do so several
+ times a day. Working at art, painting, and above all music and
+ beauty have a strong influence over me and set my erotic longings
+ in violent motion. I have never found this do me any harm.
+ Abstinence, on the other hand, has a very harmful effect on me,
+ upsetting the whole nervous and physical system. I often find
+ that there is a something very much wanting in self-abuse: the
+ commingling of two human bodies who are <i>mentally</i> as well as
+ physically in sympathy gives an electrical satisfaction which
+ quiets the whole nervous system. That at least has been my
+ experience.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;The gardener left and moved to the country. I then sometimes
+ visited <i>pissoirs</i> or, as they are often called, 'panoramas'
+ (because they are round and one sees much there). What I saw in
+ the parks during the long summer nights was quite a revelation.
+ During the summer, when the husbands had sent their families in
+ the country, many of them led a very indiscreet life. What I saw
+ the first summer killed all the respect I had for elderly people.
+ I had always connected marriage and gray hairs with virtue and
+ morals; then I learnt otherwise. I must say I became about this
+ time a <i>sensual pig</i>. I knew how dangerous these places were on
+ account of the police and blackmailers, but that gave the hunt a
+ double zest. At this time I led a double life and was always
+ watching and analyzing myself. I had to do with heaps of men of
+ all classes. I was often offered money, but that I would on no
+ condition accept. To pay or to be paid kills every sort of erotic
+ feeling in me and always has done so. I once wished to experiment
+ with myself. I was offered a small sum of money by a former
+ schoolmaster. I accepted this just to see how it would affect me.
+ The next moment I threw the money as far away as possible. Then I
+ saw I had none of the prostitute nature in me. I was simply
+ overwhelmed with sensuality. I considered I was a criminal and
+ wished to see in how many ways my nature had the criminal
+ instinct. I wanted to see if I could become a thief. I stole a
+ silver button in a shop where antiquities were sold, but I went
+ to the shop the same day again and returned the button, without
+ the people knowing. I found I could not become a thief. Then the
+ question came. Why had I felt a criminal since my seventh year?
+ Was it my fault? If not, whose fault was it? Not till I studied
+ Freud's psychoanalytical system did I get a clear insight into my
+ own character.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;When I was 20 years of age I met a gentleman one night in a
+ heavy snow-storm. We walked and talked and understood each other.
+ He belonged to one of Sweden's first aristocratic families. He
+ was extremely refined. He asked me to his rooms. We undressed and
+ lay down. He had a very beautiful head and a still more beautiful
+ body.<a name='2_Page_133'></a> I think that all my erotic feelings were numbed by looking
+ at his beautiful body. To me anything sensual would have been
+ sacrilege, I thought, and I can remember the feeling of awe which
+ came over me. He was them 20 years of age, but his hair was quite
+ white. First he did not understand, and then he was very gentle
+ to me. I kept perfectly chaste for three whole months after the
+ sight of his body. We saw each other often. Eight years later we
+ met for the last time. He suffered much from melancholia. At that
+ time I prevented him from committing suicide. This winter,
+ however, he shot himself.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;At the age of 22 my sister introduced me to a charming,
+ intelligent and refined, half-English, half-Swedish painter. We
+ 'recognized' each other at once, though we had never seen each
+ other before, and even knew each other's characters to the
+ smallest traits. My parents liked him better than any friend I
+ had ever had. My sister and he were from the first like sister
+ and brother. The first evening in my home he and I kissed each
+ other. The women were mad about him. Later I found many men were
+ too. I was three weeks his senior. He had his own rooms. I have
+ never felt any such wonderful harmony as when our naked bodies
+ mingled. It was like floating in ether. With him it was the only
+ time I had been active in <i>fellatio</i>. We were much together,
+ though not much physically, for he had many love affairs with
+ women. What I loved was the way he would cut off all advances of
+ men, I was his 'little brother' and so he calls me to this day.
+ He is now married in America, and the father of a pretty little
+ daughter. We are the best of friends to this day.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;The two years in Copenhagen were some of the happiest I have
+ spent, though nearly the whole time I was in physical pain. In
+ Austria I found, among the Tyrolese peasants, that the
+ Englishmen, who come there in winter for sports and in the summer
+ for mountain climbing, have demoralized the young male peasants
+ with money. Homosexual intercourse is easy to get if you are
+ willing to pay the price,&mdash;larger in season, less out of season.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;In Italy it is merely a question of money or passion, but
+ everything in love there is quite transient.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;In Bavaria I found the love and peace 'which passeth all
+ understanding.' This love and friendship without anything of a
+ physically intimate nature brought me back from the 'deep black
+ gulf' to which I was swiftly floating. When I met my friend I was
+ nearly at the end of my tether. What his love and friendship has
+ done for me, together with Freud's psychoanalytical system,
+ nobody will ever know.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;Since being in Berlin, a town I like very much, a new life has
+ opened for me, a life where one lives as one likes if one does
+ not have to do with young boys. Here are homosexual baths,
+ pensions, restaurants, <a name='2_Page_134'></a>and hotels, where you can go with one of
+ your own sex at a certain fee per hour. Berlin is a revelation.
+ But since being here I find the physical erotic side of my nature
+ is little excited. I suppose it is the old story of 'forbidden
+ fruit.'</p>
+
+<p> &quot;My parents kept a very hospitable home. The last two years in
+ Sweden I was never at home. I hated society and knew much too
+ much about the private histories of those who came to my home.
+ They all belonged to the highest society. The highest society and
+ the lowest are very much alike. Of course my parents knew nothing
+ about these people. When I told my mother a great deal of private
+ history of people who came to our house, she was thunderstruck
+ and could at last understand my contempt for so-called good
+ society. I have visited in later years only in artistic and
+ theatrical circles; I consider that class of people more natural
+ than the other class and much more kind-hearted.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;My life has quite another side, the mystic side. But that would
+ be a much longer story than this. Suffice it to say, I am of a
+ highly sensitive nature, gifted with second sight.&quot; [A detailed
+ record of the subject's visions, premonitions of death of
+ acquaintances, etc., has been furnished by him.]</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I tried on four occasions to commit suicide, but I now see there
+ is nothing to be gained by doing so.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;Two years ago I told my parents about my sexual condition. It
+ was a frightful blow to them. My father had the circumstances
+ explained to him; he never understood the matter and never
+ discussed it with me. Had I told him earlier I feel quite certain
+ that, with his despotic nature, he would have put me in a
+ madhouse. My mother and sister have treated me very kindly
+ always. My brother has disowned me.&quot;</p>
+
+
+<p> <b>HISTORY XVI.&mdash;</b>Irish, aged 36; knows of nothing unusual in his
+ ancestry. His tastes are masculine in every respect. He is
+ strong, healthy, and fond of exercises and sports. The sexual
+ instincts are abnormally developed; he confesses to an, enormous
+ appetite for almost everything,&mdash;food, drink, smoking, and all
+ the good things of life.</p>
+
+<p> At about the age of 14 he practised masturbation with other boys
+ of the same age, and also had much pleasure in being in bed with
+ an uncle with whom the same thing was practised. Later on he
+ practised masturbation with every boy or man with whom he was on
+ terms of intimacy; to have been in bed with anyone without
+ anything of the sort taking place would have made sleep
+ impossible, and rendered him utterly wretched. His erotic dreams
+ at first were concerned with women, but more recently they are
+ usually of young men, and very rarely of women. He is mostly
+ indifferent to women, as also they have always been to him.
+ Although good-looking, strong, and masculine, he has never <a name='2_Page_135'></a>known
+ a woman to be in love with him. When about the age of 18 he
+ imagined he was in love with a girl; and he had often, between
+ the ages of 20 to 30, cohabited with prostitutes. He remembers on
+ one occasion, many years ago, having connection with a woman
+ seven or eight times in one night, and then having to masturbate
+ at noon the next day. He is unmarried, and thinks it is unlikely
+ that he ever will marry, but he adds that if a healthy, handsome,
+ and intelligent woman fell in love with him he might change his
+ mind, as it would be lonely to be old and alone, and he would
+ like to have children.</p>
+
+<p> He is never attracted to men older than himself, and prefers
+ youths between the ages of 18 and 25. They may be of any class,
+ but he does not like common people, and is not attached to
+ uniforms or liveries. The requisite attractions are an
+ intelligent eye, a voluptuous mouth, and &quot;intelligent teeth.&quot; &quot;If
+ Alcibiades himself tried to woo me,&quot; he says, &quot;and had bad teeth,
+ his labor would be in vain.&quot; He has sometimes been the active
+ participant in <i>pedicatio</i>, and has tried the passive r&ocirc;le out of
+ curiosity, but prefers <i>fellatio</i>.</p>
+
+<p> He does not consider that he is doing anything wrong, and regards
+ his acts as quite natural. His only regret is the absorbing
+ nature of his passions, which obtrude themselves in season and
+ out of season, seldom or never leaving him quiet, and sometimes
+ making his life a hell. Yet he doubts whether he would change
+ himself, even if he had the power.</p>
+
+
+<p> <b>HISTORY XVII.&mdash;</b>Age 25; is employed in an ordinary workshop, and
+ lives in the back alley of a large town in which he was born and
+ bred. Fair, slight, and refined in appearance. The sexual organs
+ are normal and well developed, and the sexual passions strong.
+ His mother is a big masculine woman, and he is much attached to
+ her. Father is slight and weakly. He has seven brothers and one
+ sister. Homosexual desires began at an early age, though he does
+ not seem to have come under any perverse influences. He is not
+ inclined to masturbation. Erotic dreams are always of males. He
+ declares he never cared for any woman except his mother, and that
+ he could not endure to sleep with a woman.</p>
+
+<p> He says he generally falls in love with a man at first sight&mdash;as
+ a rule, some one older than himself and of higher class&mdash;and
+ longs to sleep and be with him. In one case he fell in love with
+ a man twice his own age, and would not rest until he had won his
+ affection. He does not much care what form the sexual relation
+ takes. He is sensitive and feminine by nature, gentle, and
+ affectionate. He is neat and orderly in his habits, and fond of
+ housework; helps his mother in washing, etc. He appears to think
+ that male attachments are perfectly natural.</p>
+
+
+<p> <b>HISTORY XVIII.&mdash;</b>Englishman, born in Paris; aged 26; an actor. He
+ belongs to an old English family; his father, so far as he is
+ aware, had no homosexual inclinations, nor had any of his
+ ancestors on the <a name='2_Page_136'></a>paternal side; but he believes that his
+ mother's family, and especially a maternal uncle who had a strong
+ feeling for beauty of form, were more akin to him in this
+ respect.</p>
+
+<p> His earliest recollections show an attraction for males. At
+ children's parties he incurred his father's anger by kissing
+ other small boys, and his feelings grew in intensity with years.
+ He has never practised self-abuse, and seldom had erotic dreams;
+ when they do occur they are about males.</p>
+
+<p> His physical feeling for women is one of absolute indifference.
+ He admires beautiful women in the same way as one admires
+ beautiful scenery. At the same time he likes to talk with clever
+ women, and has formed many friendships with frank, pure, and
+ cultivated English girls, for whom he has the utmost admiration
+ and respect. Marriage is impossible, because physical pleasure
+ with women is impossible; he has tried, but cannot obtain, the
+ slightest sexual feeling or excitement.</p>
+
+<p> He especially admires youths (though they must not be immature)
+ from 16 or 17 to about 25. The type which physically appeals to
+ him most, and to which he appeals, is fair, smooth-skinned,
+ gentle, rather girlish and effeminate, with the effeminacy of the
+ <i>ing&eacute;nue</i>, not the <i>cocotte</i>. His favorite to attract him must be
+ submissive and womanly; he likes to be the man and the master. On
+ this point he adds: &quot;The great passion of my life is an
+ exception, and stands on an utterly different level. It realizes
+ an ideal of marriage in which neither is master, but both share a
+ joint empire, and in which tyranny would be equally painful to
+ both. But this friendship and love is for an equal, a year
+ younger than myself, and does not preclude other and less
+ creditable <i>liaisons, physical</i> constancy being impossible to men
+ of our caliber.&quot;</p>
+
+<p> <i>Pedicatio</i> is the satisfaction he prefers, provided he takes the
+ active, never the passive, r&ocirc;le. He is handsome, with broad
+ shoulders, good figure, and somewhat classic type of face, with
+ fine blue eyes. He likes boating and skating, though not cricket
+ or football, and is usually ready for fun, but has, at the same
+ time, a taste for reading.</p>
+
+<p> He has no moral feelings on these matters; he regards them as
+ outside ethics, mere matters of temperament and social feeling.
+ If England were underpopulated he thinks he might possibly feel
+ some slight pangs of remorse; but, as things are, he feels that
+ in prostituting males rather than females he is doing a
+ meritorious action.</p>
+
+
+<p> <b>HISTORY XIX.&mdash;</b>T. N. His history is given in his own words.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;From the time of my earliest imaginings I have always been
+ attached by strength in men and often thought about being carried
+ off by big warriors and living with them in caves and elsewhere.
+ When about 7 a young man used to show me his penis and handle
+ mine occasionally. At private boarding school masturbation was
+ fairly frequent <a name='2_Page_137'></a>and I suppose I was initiated about 12 or 13.
+ After leaving I occasionally indulged, but nothing happened until
+ I was about 20, except that I was often attracted by strong,
+ well-built young men of good character; a man who was not honest
+ and good-hearted had no attraction. At 20 I was much attached to
+ a young man of my own age. He was engaged. This did not prevent
+ him on one occasion endeavoring playfully and with his brother to
+ obtain access to my person. I successfully resisted, although if
+ <i>he</i> only had been present I should not have done so, but
+ welcomed the attempt, and I have often regretted I did not let
+ him know this. But I had a dim idea that my penis was somewhat
+ undeveloped and this made me shy. Circumstances separated us.
+ About two years later I was crossing the Channel when I engaged
+ in conversation with a man about eight years older, who was one
+ of our travelling party. I think the attraction was a case of
+ love at sight, certainly on my side. A few nights later he had so
+ arranged that we shared a bedroom, and he very soon came over to
+ me and tenderly handled my person. I reciprocated and I look back
+ all these years to that night with pleasure and no feeling of
+ shame. On one occasion, about this time, I happened to be
+ sleeping with another young fellow (an office mate) on a holiday,
+ when I awoke and found him handling my penis caressingly. I
+ gently removed his hand and turned over. I thought none the less
+ of him, but my body seemed to belong only to myself and the
+ friend I loved. He was not an urning, I am sure, but we Were
+ often together and I much entered into his interests and felt
+ infinite satisfaction with life, made good progress and many
+ friends. Our physical intimacy was repeated, he taking the active
+ part in intercrural contact. Then he married very happily. Our
+ friendship remains, but circumstances prevent our often meeting,
+ and there is no longer desire on either part.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;For some years I was rather lonely in spite of friends. I was
+ somewhat attracted to another man, but his superior social
+ position was a defect to me. Then when about 28 I came in contact
+ with a young man of 24, of the artisan class, but superior in
+ ideals and intelligence to most men. I loved him at first glance
+ and to this day. At first it was just friendship, but soon his
+ form, voice, and thoughts entered into my very soul by day and
+ night. I longed always to be near him, to see him progress and
+ help him if I could. I would joyfully have given up home,
+ friends, and income, and followed him to the end of the world,
+ preferably an island where we two might at least be the only
+ white men. He seemed to embody all I longed for in the way of
+ knowledge of nature, of strength, of practical ability, and the
+ desire to imitate him in these things widened and strengthened my
+ character. The first time I slept with him I could only summon
+ courage to put my arm over his chest, <a name='2_Page_138'></a>but I could not sleep for
+ unsatisfied desire, and the unrelieved erection caused a dull
+ pain on the morrow. I had always disliked conversation that might
+ be regarded as bordering on the obscene, and consequently was
+ very ignorant on most matters; it pained me even to hear him
+ laugh at such remarks. I think if he had been intimate with me I
+ should have not conversed much on such topics, but now I felt
+ pleasure in such things with him as they expressed intimacy. I
+ dreamed about him and was never really happy in his absence; the
+ greatest joy would have been to have slept in his arms; the
+ hairiness of his legs and arms were also most fascinating.
+ Perhaps a year later, we were again at night together, and this
+ time I by degrees felt his private organs, but he was cold and I
+ felt a little unsatisfied. I wanted to be hugged. This happened
+ once more, and then on a later occasion,&mdash;not that it afforded me
+ much gratification, but because I wanted to stimulate him to
+ ardor,&mdash;I attempted masturbation. This aroused his disgust and I
+ was consequently dismayed. He told me I ought to marry and,
+ although I knew his love was all I wanted, I did not feel but
+ what I could make a woman happy. The constant unrelieved
+ erections which took place when I saw my friend adopt a graceful
+ attitude caused pain at the bottom of my back, and I consulted
+ two specialists, who also advised marriage. I did not tell them I
+ was an 'invert,' for I hardly knew it was a recognized thing, but
+ I did tell them something of what had taken place, and they made
+ next to no comment, but implied it was frequent. My friend now
+ felt repulsion toward me, but did not express himself, and as
+ other circumstances then caused a barrier between us to a certain
+ extent, I did not realize the true reason of his coldness. But I
+ felt utterly miserable. When I met a noble woman whom I had long
+ known I asked her to be my wife and she consented. Although I
+ told her very soon, and long before our marriage, of my
+ limitations as a husband and of my continued longing for my
+ friend, I feel now I did a great wrong, and I cannot understand
+ why I was not more conscious of this at the time; that I was to a
+ certain extent deceiving her relations was inevitable. I had
+ expected to devote my life in making her happy, but I soon found
+ that the true reason of my friend's apparent unfaithfulness was
+ my own action, combined with a feeling on his part that it was as
+ well that our affection should cease even at the cost of
+ misunderstanding. Since then, three years ago, I have not had a
+ happy day or night, and am therefore quite unable to promote
+ happiness in others. Without my friend, I can find no
+ satisfaction with wife, child, or home. Life has become almost
+ unbearable. Often I have seriously thought of committing suicide,
+ only to postpone it to a time which would be less cruelly
+ inopportune to others. I see my friend (now married) almost
+ daily, and suffer tortures at seeing others nearer to him than
+ myself. No <a name='2_Page_139'></a>explanation seems possible, as the whole idea of
+ inversion is so repugnant to him, and being an honorable man he
+ would feel marital ties preclude <i>any</i> warmth of affection. But
+ all the longing of my life seems to be culminating in a driving
+ force which will carry me to the male prostitute or to death. I
+ can concentrate my mind on nothing else, and consequently have
+ become inefficient in work and have no heart for play. I know if
+ my longings could be occasionally satisfied I should immediately
+ recover, but my fear is that if I killed myself those who knew me
+ in happier days would only be confirmed in the impression of my
+ degeneracy and would feel my instincts had caused it, whereas it
+ is the denial and starvation of them which would have brought
+ about the result. I know now by experience of self and others
+ that my disposition is congenital and that I have been rendered
+ unhappy myself and a cause of unhappiness to others by the too
+ late knowledge of myself. The example of my former friend who
+ married misled me to think I too <i>could</i> marry and make a happy
+ home; so that when the man I loved advised me I resolved to do
+ so, as I would have done almost anything else <i>he</i> suggested. If
+ I could have withdrawn from the engagement without embarrassment
+ to the devoted woman who became my wife I would have done so, if
+ she gave me the opportunity. Nothing in my married state has
+ brought me pleasure and I often wish my wife would cease to love
+ me so that we might separate. But she would be heart-broken at
+ the suggestion and I feel driven to attempt to relieve my
+ feelings even in a way that has previously seemed repulsive to
+ me,&mdash;I mean by use of money.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;About my feelings toward my child there is not much to say, as
+ they are not very strong. I believe I carry him and help bathe
+ and attend to him as much as most fathers, and when he is a few
+ years older I hope I may find him very companionable. But he has
+ brought me no real joy, though I see other men look at him almost
+ with affection. But he has brought added happiness to his
+ mother.&quot; </p></div>
+
+<p>The next case is interesting as showing the mental and emotional
+development in a very radical case of sexual inversion.</p>
+
+
+<div class='blkquot'><p><b>HISTORY XX.&mdash;</b>Englishman, of independent means, aged 49. His
+ father and his father's family were robust, healthy, and
+ prolific. On his mother's side, phthisis, insanity, and
+ eccentricity are traceable. He belongs to a large family, some of
+ whom died in early childhood and at birth, while others are
+ normal. He himself was a weakly and highly nervous child, subject
+ to night-terrors and somnambulism, excessive shyness and
+ religious disquietude.</p>
+
+<p> Sexual consciousness awoke before the age of 8, when his
+ attention was directed to his own penis. His nurse, while out
+ walking with him <a name='2_Page_140'></a>one day, told him that when little boys grow'
+ up their penes fall off. The nursery-maid sniggered, and he felt
+ that there must be something peculiar about the penis. He
+ suffered from; irritability of the prepuce, and the nurse
+ powdered it before he went to sleep. There was no transition from
+ this to self-abuse.</p>
+
+<p> About the same time he became subject to curious half-waking
+ dreams. In these he imagined himself the servant of several adult
+ naked sailors; he crouched between their thighs and called
+ himself their dirty pig, and by their orders he performed
+ services for their genitals and buttocks, which he contemplated
+ and handled with relish. At about the same period, when these
+ visions began to come to him, he casually heard that a man used
+ to come and expose his person before the window of a room where
+ the maids sat; this troubled him vaguely. Between the age of 8
+ and 11 he twice took the penis of a cousin into his mouth, after
+ they had slept together; the feeling of the penis pleased him.
+ When sleeping with another cousin, they used to lie with hands
+ outstretched to cover each other's penis or nates. He preferred
+ the nates, but his cousin the penis. Neither of these cousins was
+ homosexual, and there was no attempt at mutual masturbation. He
+ was in the habit of playing with five male cousins. One of these
+ boys was unpopular with the others, and they invented a method of
+ punishing him for supposed offenses. They sat around the room on
+ chairs, each with his penis exposed, and the boy to be punished
+ went around the room on his knees and took each penis into his
+ mouth in turn. This was supposed to humiliate him. It did not
+ lead to masturbation. On one occasion the child accidentally
+ observed a boy who sat next to him in school playing with his
+ penis and caressing it. This gave him a powerful, uneasy
+ sensation. With regard to all these points the subject observes
+ that none of the boys with whom he was connected at this period,
+ and who were exposed to precisely the same influences, became
+ homosexual.</p>
+
+<p> He was himself, from the first, indifferent to the opposite sex.
+ In early childhood, and up to the age of 13, he had frequent
+ opportunities of closely inspecting the sexual organs of girls,
+ his playfellows. These roused no sexual excitement. On the
+ contrary, the smell of the female parts affected him
+ disagreeably. When he once saw a schoolfellow copulating with a
+ little girl, it gave him a sense of mystical horror. Nor did the
+ sight of the male organs arouse any particular sensations. He is,
+ however, of opinion that, living with his sisters in childhood,
+ he felt more curious about his own sex as being more remote from
+ him. He showed no effeminacy in his preferences for games or
+ work.</p>
+
+<p> He went to a public school. Here he was provoked by boy friends
+ to masturbate, but, though he often saw the act in process, it
+ only inspired him with a sense of indecency. In his fifteenth
+ year puberty commenced <a name='2_Page_141'></a>with nocturnal emissions, and, at the
+ same time, he began to masturbate, and continued to do so about
+ once a week, or once a fortnight, during a period of eight
+ months; always with a feeling that that was a poor satisfaction
+ and repulsive. His thoughts were not directed either to males or
+ females while masturbating. He spoke to his father about these
+ signs of puberty, and by his father's advice he entirely
+ abandoned onanism; he only resumed the practice, to some extent,
+ after the age of 30, when he was without male comradeship.</p>
+
+<p> The nocturnal emissions, after he had abandoned self-abuse,
+ became very frequent and exhausting. They were medically treated
+ by tonics such as quinine and strychnine. He thinks this
+ treatment exaggerated his neurosis.</p>
+
+<p> All this time, no kind of sexual feeling for girls made itself
+ felt. He could not understand what his schoolfellows found in
+ women, or the stories they told about wantonness and delight of
+ coitus.</p>
+
+<p> His old dreams about the sailors had disappeared. But now he
+ enjoyed visions of beautiful young men and exquisite statues; he
+ often shed tears when he thought of them. These dreams persisted
+ for years. But another kind gradually usurped their place to some
+ extent. These second visions took the form of the large, erect
+ organs of naked young grooms or peasants. These gross visions
+ offended his taste and hurt him, though, at the same time, they
+ evoked a strong, active desire for possession; he took a strange,
+ poetic pleasure in the ideal form. But the seminal losses which
+ accompanied both kinds of dreams were a perpetual source of
+ misery to him.</p>
+
+<p> There is no doubt that at this time&mdash;that is, between the
+ fifteenth and seventeenth years&mdash;a homosexual diathesis had
+ become established. He never frequented loose women, though he
+ sometimes thought that would be the best way of combating his
+ growing inclination for males. And he thinks that he might have
+ brought himself to indulge freely in purely sexual pleasure with
+ women if he made their first acquaintance in a male costume, as
+ <i>d&eacute;bardeuses, Cherubino</i>, court-pages, young halberdiers, as it
+ is only when so clothed that women on the stage or in the
+ ball-room have excited him.</p>
+
+<p> His ideal of morality and fear of venereal infection, more than
+ physical incapacity, kept him what is called chaste. He never
+ dreamed of women, never sought their society, never felt the
+ slightest sexual excitement in their presence, never idealized
+ them. Esthetically, he thought them far less beautiful than men.
+ Statues and pictures of naked women had no attraction for him,
+ while all objects of art which represented handsome males deeply
+ stirred him.</p>
+
+<p> It was in his eighteenth year that an event occurred which he
+ regards as decisive in his development. He read Plato. A new
+ world <a name='2_Page_142'></a>opened, and he felt that his own nature had been revealed.
+ Next year he formed a passionate, but pure, friendship with a boy
+ of 15. Personal contact with the boy caused erection, extreme
+ agitation, and aching pleasure, but not ejaculation. Through four
+ years he never saw the boy naked or touched him pruriently. Only
+ twice he kissed him. He says that these two kisses were the most
+ perfect joys he ever felt.</p>
+
+<p> His father now became seriously anxious both about his health and
+ his reputation. He warned him of the social and legal dangers
+ attending his temperament. But he did not encourage him to try
+ coitus with women. He himself thinks that his own sense of danger
+ might have made this method successful, or that, at all events,
+ the habit of intercourse with women might have lessened neurosis
+ and diverted his mind to some extent from homosexual thoughts.</p>
+
+<p> A period of great pain and anxiety now opened for him. But his
+ neurasthenia increased; he suffered from insomnia, obscure
+ cerebral discomfort, stammering, chronic conjunctivitis,
+ inability to concentrate his attention, and dejection. Meanwhile
+ his homosexual emotions strengthened, and assumed a more sensual
+ character. He abstained from indulging them, as also from
+ onanism, but he was often forced, with shame and reluctance, to
+ frequent places&mdash;baths, urinaries, and so forth&mdash;where there were
+ opportunities of seeing naked men.</p>
+
+<p> Having no passion for women, it was easy to avoid them. Yet they
+ inspired him with no exact horror. He used to dream of finding an
+ exit from his painful situation by cohabitation with some coarse,
+ boyish girl of the people; but his dread of syphilis stood in the
+ way. He felt, however, that he must conquer himself by efforts of
+ will, and by a persistent direction of his thoughts to
+ heterosexual images. He sought the society of distinguished
+ women. Once he coaxed up a romantic affection for a young girl of
+ 15, which came to nothing, probably because the girl felt the
+ want of absolute passion in his wooing. She excited his
+ imagination, and he really loved her; but she did not, even in
+ the closest contact, stimulate his sexual appetite. Once, when he
+ kissed her just after she had risen from bed in the morning, a
+ curious physical repugnance came over him, attended with a sad
+ feeling of disappointment.</p>
+
+<p> He was strongly advised to marry by physicians. At last he did
+ so. He found that he was potent, and begot several children, but
+ he also found, to his disappointment, that the tyranny of the
+ male genital organs on his fancy increased. Owing to this cause
+ his physical, mental, and moral discomfort became acute. His
+ health gave way.</p>
+
+<p> At about the age of 30, unable to endure his position any longer,
+ he at last yielded to his sexual inclinations. As he began to do
+ this, he also began to regain calm and comparative health. He
+ formed a close <a name='2_Page_143'></a>alliance with a youth of 19. This <i>liaison</i> was
+ largely sentimental, and marked by a kind of etherealized
+ sensuality. It involved no sexual acts beyond kissing, naked
+ contact, and rare involuntary emissions. About the age of 36 he
+ began freely to follow homosexual inclinations. After this he
+ rapidly recovered his health. The neurotic disturbances subsided.</p>
+
+<p> He has always loved men younger than himself. At about the age of
+ 27 he had begun to admire young soldiers. Since he yielded freely
+ to his inclinations the men he has sought are invariably persons
+ of a lower social rank than his own. He carried on one <i>liaison</i>
+ continuously for twelve years; it began without passion on the
+ friend's side, but gradually grew to nearly equal strength on
+ both sides. He is not attracted by uniforms, but seeks some
+ uncontaminated child of nature.</p>
+
+<p> The methods of satisfaction have varied with the phases of his
+ passion. At first they were romantic and Platonic, when a
+ hand-touch, a rare kiss, or mere presence sufficed. In the second
+ period sleeping side by side, inspection of the naked body of the
+ loved man, embracements, and occasional emissions after prolonged
+ contact. In the third period the gratification became more
+ frankly sensual. It took every shape: mutual masturbation,
+ intercrural coitus, <i>fellatio, irrumatio</i>, and occasionally
+ active <i>pedicatio</i>; always according to the inclination or
+ concession of the beloved male.</p>
+
+<p> He himself always plays the active, masculine part. He never
+ yields himself to the other, and he asserts that he never has the
+ joy of finding himself desired with ardor equal to his own. He
+ does not shrink from passive <i>pedicatio</i>; but it is never
+ demanded of him. Coitus with males, as above described, always
+ seems to him healthy and natural; it leaves a deep sense of
+ well-being, and has cemented durable friendships. He has always
+ sought to form permanent ties with the men whom he has adored so
+ excessively.</p>
+
+<p> He is of medium height, not robust, but with great nervous
+ energy, with strong power of will and self-control, able to
+ resist fatigue and changes of external circumstances.</p>
+
+<p> In boyhood he had no liking for female occupations, or for the
+ society of girls, preferring study and solitude. He avoided games
+ and the noisy occupations of boys, but was only non-masculine in
+ his indifference to sport, was never feminine in dress or habit.
+ He never succeeded in his attempts to whistle. He is a great
+ smoker, and has at times drunk much. He likes riding, skating,
+ and climbing, but is a poor horseman, and is clumsy with his
+ hands. He has no capacity for the fine arts and music, though
+ much interested in them, and is a prolific author.</p>
+
+<p> He has suffered extremely throughout life, owing to his sense of
+ the difference between himself and normal human beings. No
+ pleasure he has <a name='2_Page_144'></a>enjoyed, he declares, can equal a thousandth
+ part of the pain caused by the internal consciousness of
+ pariahdom. The utmost he can plead in his own defense, he admits,
+ is irresponsibility, for he acknowledges that his impulse may be
+ morbid. But he feels absolutely certain that in early life his
+ health was ruined and his moral repose destroyed owing to the
+ perpetual conflict with his own inborn nature, and that relief
+ and strength came with indulgence. Although he always has before
+ him the terror of discovery, he is convinced that his sexual
+ dealings with men have been thoroughly wholesome to himself,
+ largely increasing his physical, moral, and intellectual energy,
+ and not injurious to others. He has no sense whatever of moral
+ wrong in his actions, and he regards the attitude of society
+ toward those in his position as utterly unjust and founded on
+ false principles. </p></div>
+
+<p>The next case is, like the foregoing, that of a successful man of letters
+who also passed through a long period of mental conflict before he became
+reconciled to his homosexual instincts. He belongs to a family who are all
+healthy and have shown marked ability in different intellectual
+departments. He feels certain that one of his brothers is as absolute an
+invert as himself and that another is attracted to both sexes. I am
+indebted to him for the following detailed narrative, describing his
+emotions and experiences in childhood, which I regard as of very great
+interest, not only as a contribution to the psychology of inversion, but
+to the embryology of the sexual emotions generally. We here see described,
+in an unduly precocious and hyperesthetic form, ideas and feelings which,
+in a slighter and more fragmentary shape, may be paralleled in the early
+experiences of many normal men and women. But it must be rare to find so
+many points in sexual psychology so definitely illustrated in a single
+child. It may be added that the narrative is also not without interest as
+a study in the evolution of a man of letters; a child whose imagination
+was thus early exercised and developed was predestined for a literary
+career.</p>
+
+
+<div class='blkquot'><p><b>HISTORY XXI.&mdash;</b>&quot;Almost the earliest recollection I have is of a
+ dream, which, from my vivid recollection of its details, must
+ have repeated itself, I think, more than once, unless my waking
+ thoughts unconsciously added definition. From this dream dated my
+ consciousness of the attraction to me of my own sex, which has
+ ever since dominated <a name='2_Page_145'></a>my life. The dream, suggested in part, I
+ think, by a picture in an illustrated newspaper of a mob
+ murdering a church dignitary, took this form: I dreamed that I
+ saw my own father murdered by a gang of ruffians, but I do not
+ remember that I felt any grief, though I was actually an
+ exceedingly affectionate child. The body was then stripped of its
+ clothing and eviscerated. I had at the time no notion of
+ anatomical details; but the particulars remain distinct to my
+ mind's eye, of entrails uniformly brown, the color of dung, and
+ there was no accompaniment of blood. When the abdomen had been
+ emptied, the incident in which I became an active participant
+ occurred. I was seized (and the fact that I was overpowered
+ contributed to the agony of delight it afforded me) and was laid
+ between the thighs of my murdered parent; and from there I had
+ presently crawled my way into the evacuated, abdomen. The act, so
+ far as I can decide of a dream at an age when emission was out of
+ the question, caused in me extreme organic excitement. At all
+ events, I used afterward definitely to recur to it in the waking
+ moments before sleep for the purpose of gaining a state of
+ erection. The dream had no outcome; it seemed to reach its goal
+ in the excitement it caused. I was at that time between 3 and 4
+ years old. (I have been told that erections occurred when I was
+ only 2 years old. It was between 3 and 4 that I used to induce,
+ at all events, the <i>sensation</i> of an erection. But I was nearer 5
+ when, sitting on my bed and waiting to be dressed, I got an
+ involuntary erection and called my nurse's attention to it,
+ asking what it meant. The <i>appearance</i> must, therefore, have been
+ usual to me at that date, but certainly the sensation was not.)</p>
+
+<p> &quot;At that time I was totally ignorant of the conditions, of
+ puberty, which afterward, when I discovered them, so powerfully
+ affected me. I could not even visualize the private organs of a
+ man; I made no deductions from myself. The only naked bodies I
+ had seen then&mdash;I judge from circumstances, not from any actual
+ memory of the facts&mdash;were those of my own sisters. In the waking
+ dreams which I began to construct, though I recurred often to the
+ one already narrated, the goal of my desire was generally to
+ nestle between the thighs or to have my face pressed against the
+ hinder parts of the object of my worship. But for a time my first
+ dream so engrossed me that I did not indulge in any promiscuity.
+ Gradually, however, my horizon enlarged, and took in, besides the
+ first mentioned, three others: a cousin very much my elder, an
+ uncle, and the curate of the parish.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;At this stage I began to invent circumstances for the indulgence
+ of my passion. One of the earliest was to imagine myself in a
+ tank with my three lovers floating in the water above me. From
+ this position I visited their limbs in turn; the attraction
+ rested in the thighs and buttocks <a name='2_Page_146'></a>only. I fancy this limitation
+ of the charm to the lower parts only lasted until actual
+ experience of a more complete embrace made me as much a lover of
+ the arms and breast; indeed, later I became more emotionally
+ enamored of these parts than of all the rest. At the beginning of
+ things I simply loved best what my mind could first get hold of.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;Quite early in my experience, when I was not more than 5, I
+ awoke earlier than usual, and saw my nurse standing in complete
+ nudity, commencing her toilet. She seemed to me a gross, coarse,
+ and meaningless object; the hair under her armpits displeased me,
+ and still more that on the lower part of her body. In the case of
+ men, directly I came to have cognizance of the same thing on
+ their bodies, the effect was exactly the opposite. It so happened
+ that about this time the gardener had received some injury to his
+ leg, and in showing the bruise to another exhibited before my
+ eyes a skin completely shagged over with dark hair. Though the
+ sight of the bruise repulsed me, my pleasure was intense, and the
+ vision of the gardener's legs was in my bed every night for a
+ week afterward. My point is that the sight of my nurse was liable
+ to rouse interest just as much as the far more prosaic display of
+ the gardener's wounded leg, but my nature made it impossible.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;It was about this time, if not before, that an enormous sense of
+ shyness with regard to all my private duties began to afflict me.
+ So great was it that I could endure from no hand except my
+ mother's or my nurse's the necessary assistance in the buttoning
+ and unbuttoning of my garments, always excepting those who were
+ about my own age, toward whom I felt no privacy whatever.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;When I was a little more than 5 I formed a friendship with a
+ young clerk, a youth of about 15, though he seemed to me a
+ grown-up person. One day, as he sat at his desk writing, I sat
+ down and began playing with his feet, investigating the height to
+ which his socks went under his trousers; in this way I obtained
+ six inches of bare leg. Conscious of my courage I fell to kissing
+ it. My friend laughed, but left me to my devotions in peace. This
+ was the first time in which a feeling of romance mixed itself in
+ my dreams; the physical excitement was less, but the pleasure was
+ greater. I cannot understand why I never repeated the experience.
+ He remained to me an object of very special and tender
+ consideration.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;In the next episode I have to relate the ideal was totally
+ absent, and the part I played was passive rather than active. I
+ was put to sleep with a boy considerably my senior. His
+ initiation led to a physical familiarity between us which was not
+ warm or kind, and I was allowed no scope for my own instinctive
+ desires for a warmer kind of contact; if I sought it under cover
+ of my companion's slumbers I found myself <a name='2_Page_147'></a>kicked away. Only on
+ one occasion did I find a few moments of supreme charm, while his
+ sleep remained sound, by discovering in the recesses of the sheet
+ an exposed surface of flesh against which I pressed my face in an
+ abandonment of joy. For the rest I was a passive participant, his
+ pleasure seeming to end in the mere handling of the fleshy
+ portions of my body. For this purpose I usually lay face downward
+ across his knees. So far as I can remember, this intimacy led to
+ a decrease in my pursuit of imaginative pleasures; for about a
+ year no further development took place.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;At about this date I was circumcised on account of the prepuce
+ being too long.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;Between the 6th and 7th years a change of environment brought me
+ into contact with a new set of faces. I had then a bed to myself,
+ and once more my imagination awoke to life. It was at this time
+ that I found myself constructing from men's faces suppositions as
+ to the rest of their bodies: a brown face led me to suppose a
+ uniformly brown body, a pale face a pale body. This idea of
+ variety began to charm me. I now made definite choice in my
+ reveries whether I would go to sleep between white thighs, or red
+ thighs, or brown thighs. Going to sleep definitely describes the
+ goal of the method to which I had addicted myself. As soon as I
+ entered my bed I abandoned myself to the construction of an amour
+ and retained it as long as I had consciousness. I may say that I
+ was not conscious of any emissions under these circumstances
+ (until some years later, when I brought it about by my own act),
+ but the pleasure was fairly acute.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;All this time there were secret meetings, with my bedfellow of
+ the year before. But they now took place by day, in various
+ hiding-places, with little unclothing or exposure, and my
+ companion was cold and fastidious and repelled any warmth on my
+ part; it became to me a dry sort of ritual. I had an idea at that
+ time that the whole thing was so much an original invention of
+ his and mine that there was no likelihood of it being practised
+ by anyone else in the world. But this consideration did not
+ restrain me in constructing love scenes with all those whose
+ appearance attracted me. At this period nearly every man with
+ whom I came in contact won at least my transient desire; only the
+ quite old and deformed lay outside the scope of my wishes. Many
+ of my amours developed in church; the men who sat near me were
+ the objects of my attention, and the clergyman, whose sermon I
+ did not listen to, supplied me with an occasion for reverie on
+ the charms his person would have for me under other
+ circumstances. It must have been at this time that I began to
+ elaborate ideas of a serried rank of congregated thighs across
+ which I lay and was dragged. I would arrange them in definite
+ order and then imagine myself drawn across from one <a name='2_Page_148'></a>to the other
+ somewhat forcibly. Admiration of strength was beginning at this
+ time to have a definite part in my conceptions, but anything of
+ the nature of cruelty had not then appealed to me. (I except the
+ original dream of my childhood, which seems to me still to stand
+ fantastically apart.) In the inventions to which I now gave
+ myself the sense of being passed across limbs of different
+ texture and color was subtle and pleasurable. I think the note of
+ constructive cruelty which now followed arose from an imagined
+ rivalry among my lovers for possession of me; the idea that I was
+ desired made me soon take a delight in imagining myself torn and
+ snatched about by the contending parties. Presently out of this I
+ began constructing definite scenes of violence. I was able in
+ imagination to lie in the thick and stress of conglomerated
+ deliciousness of thighs struggling to hold me; I was able to
+ imagine at least six bodies encircling me with passionate
+ contact. At the same time I had an ingrained feeling of my own
+ physical smallness in relation to the limbs whose contact threw
+ me into such paroxysms of delight. A new and sufficiently
+ ludicrous invention took possession of me; I imagined myself
+ strapped to the thigh (always, I think, the right one) of the man
+ on whom I chose, for the time, to concentrate my desires, and so
+ to be worn by him during his day's work, hidden beneath his
+ garments. I was not conscious of any difficulty due to my size.
+ The charm of bondage and compulsion was here, again, in the
+ ascendant. I fancy that it was in this connection that I first
+ anticipated whipping as the delightful climax to my emotions,
+ administered when my possessor, at the end of his day's work,
+ unclothed himself for rest.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;Up to this stage my attraction to the male organ of generation
+ had been slight and vague. Two things now contributed to bring
+ thought of it into prominence. On two or three occasions when I
+ accompanied farm laborers to their occupations I saw them pause
+ by the way to relieve nature. My extreme shyness as regards such
+ matters in my own person made this performance in my presence
+ like an outrage on my modesty; it had about it the suggestion of
+ an indecent solicitation to one whose inclination was to headlong
+ and delirious surrender. I stood rooted and flushing with
+ downcast eyes till the act was over and was conscious for a
+ considerable time of stammering speech and bewildered faculties.
+ When I afterward reviewed the circumstances they had the same
+ attraction for me that amorous cruelty was just then beginning to
+ exercise on my imagination. My mind secretly embraced the fearful
+ sweetness of the newly discovered sensation, surrounding the
+ performance of the function with all sorts of atrocious and
+ bizarre inventions. For a time my intellect hung back from
+ accepting this as the central and most fiery secret of the male
+ attraction; but shortly afterward, when out walking with my
+ father, I saw him perform the same <a name='2_Page_149'></a>act; I was overwhelmed with
+ emotion and could barely drag my feet from the spot or my eyes
+ from the damp herbage where he had deposited the waters of
+ secrecy. Even today, when my mind has been long accustomed to the
+ knowledge of generative facts, I cannot dissociate myself from
+ the shuddering charm that moment had for me. The attraction my
+ father's person had always had for me was now increased tenfold
+ by the performance I had witnessed (though I had not seen the
+ penis in any of these cases).</p>
+
+<p> &quot;For a considerable time only those lovers were dominant in my
+ imagination whom I had witnessed in the act that had so
+ poignantly affected me. My delight now took the form of imagining
+ myself strapped to the thighs of the person while this function
+ was in progress.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;By this time I must have been 8 years old. The cold and secret
+ relationship of which I have given an account had continued
+ without instructing me in any of the ardent possibilities it
+ might have suggested; no force or cruelty was used upon me, no
+ warmth was lavished. It made little difference that my companion
+ had now discovered the act of masturbation; it had no meaning to
+ me, since it led to no warmth of embrace. His method was to avert
+ himself from me; I had to fawn upon him from the rear and also to
+ invent indecent stories to stimulate his imagination. I felt
+ myself a despised instrument, the mere spectator of an act which,
+ if directed toward me with any warmth, would have aroused the
+ liveliest appetite. At this time, as I have since seen, my
+ companion was gaining knowledge from the ancient classics. For a
+ time some charm was imparted by his instructing me to adopt a
+ superincumbent face-to-face embrace. The beginning of his puberty
+ was enormously attractive to me; had he been less cold-blooded I
+ could have responded passionately to his endearments; but he
+ always insisted on rigorous passivity on my part, and he
+ explained nothing. One day, by a small gratuity, he induced me to
+ offer him my mouth, though I still had no comprehension of the
+ result I was helping to attain. Once the orgasm occurred, and the
+ effect was extremely nauseous; after that he was more careful. My
+ companion was approaching manhood, and his demands became more
+ frequent, his exactions more humiliating.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;At the same time my passion for male love was growing stronger.
+ I was able to construct from the unsatisfactory bondage in which
+ I was held images of bodily embrace which I had not before had
+ sufficient sense of human contact to form, though I seldom
+ imagined any of the acts that in actual experience repulsed me.
+ One day, however, I shirked a particularly repulsive humiliation
+ which my companion had forced upon me. He discovered the
+ deception, rose from the prone position in which he lay, and
+ throwing me across his knees thrashed me violently. I submitted
+ without a struggle, experiencing a curious sensation of <a name='2_Page_150'></a>pleasure
+ in the midst of my pain. When he repeated his order I found its
+ accomplishment no longer repulsive. One of the few pleasurable
+ memories this intimacy, extending over years, has left for me is
+ that moment of abject abasement to one who, with no warmth of
+ feeling, had yet once had sufficient energy to be brutal to me.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;It must have been from this incident that the calculated effect
+ of flagellation began to have weight with me when I indulged my
+ imagination. A wish to be repulsed, trampled, violated by the
+ object of my passion took hold of my instincts. Even then&mdash;and,
+ indeed, up to my 13th year&mdash;I had no idea of normal sexual
+ connection. I knew vaguely that children were born from women's
+ bodies; I did not know&mdash;and when told I did not believe&mdash;the true
+ facts of the marital relationship. All that I had
+ experienced&mdash;both in fact and imagination&mdash;was to me so highly
+ individual that I had no notion anything kindred to it could
+ exist outside of my own experience. I had no notion of sex as the
+ basis of life. Even when I came gradually to realize that men and
+ women were formed in a way that argued connection with each
+ other, I still believed it to be a dissolute sort of conduct, not
+ to be indulged in by those who had claims to respectability.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I had, however, by this time arrived at a strong attraction
+ toward the organs of generation and all aspects of puberty, and
+ my imagination spent Itself in a fantastic worship of every sign
+ of masculinity. My enjoyment now was to imagine myself forced to
+ undergo physical humiliation and submission to the caprice of my
+ male captors, and the central fact became the discharge of urine
+ from my lover over my body and limbs, or, if I were very fond of
+ him, I let it be in my face. This was followed usually by a
+ half-caressing castigation, in which the hand only was
+ instrumental.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;The period of which I am now writing was that of my entry into
+ school life. My imaginary lovers immediately became numerous; all
+ the masters and all the boys above a certain age attracted me;
+ for two I had in addition a feeling of romantic as well as
+ physical attachment. Indeed, from this time onward I was never
+ without some heroes toward whom I indulged a perfectly separate
+ and tenderly ideal passion. The announcement that one was about
+ to leave surprised me into a passionate fit of weeping; yet my
+ reserve was so great and my sense of isolation so crushing that I
+ made no effort at intimacy, and to one for whom I felt
+ inexhaustible devotion I barely spoke for the first three years,
+ though meeting him daily. At this time the subjects of my
+ contemplation had distinctly individualized methods of approach.
+ Thus in one case I imagined we stood face to face in our
+ night-gear; suddenly mine was stripped from me; I was seized and
+ forcibly thrust under his and made to hang with my feet off the
+ ground by my full weight on the erect <a name='2_Page_151'></a>organ which inserted
+ itself between my thighs; so suspended&mdash;my body enveloped in the
+ folds of his linen and my face pressed upon his heart&mdash;I
+ underwent a castigation which continued until I was thrown down
+ to receive a discharge of urine over my prostrate body. Such
+ images seemed to come independently of my will.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;It was at this time that I found a large pleasure in imagining
+ contact with people whom I disliked; the prevailing note of these
+ intimacies was always cruelty, to which I submitted with acute
+ relish. I discovered, however, from the ordinary school
+ experiences of corporal punishment, that it had no charm to me
+ when administered for school offenses, even from the hands under
+ which at other times I imagined myself as delighting to receive
+ pain. The necessary link was lacking; had I perceived on the part
+ of my judge any liking for the operation, there would probably
+ have been a response on my side. On one occasion I was flogged
+ unjustly; conscious as I was of its cruel instead of judiciary
+ character, this was the only castigation I received which had in
+ it an element of gratification for my instincts. At the same time
+ I never forgave the hand that administered it; it is the only
+ instance I remember in myself of a grudge nourished for years.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;Meanwhile, amid this chaos of confused love and hatred, of
+ relish for cruelty and loathing for injustice, my first
+ thoroughly romantic and ideal attachment was developing itself. I
+ may say, of those to whom romance as well as physical attachment
+ bound me, that they have remained unchangeable parts of my
+ nature. Today, as it was twenty years ago, when I think of them
+ the blood gushes to my brain, my hands tingle and moisten with an
+ emotion I cannot subdue: I am at their feet worshipping them. Of
+ them my dreams were entirely tender; the idea of cruelty never
+ touched the conception I had of them. But I return to that one
+ who was the chief influence of my youth: older than myself by
+ only three years, he was of fine build and athletic, with
+ adolescence showing in his face; my tremulous beginnings of
+ worship were confirmed by a word of encouragement thrown to me
+ one day as I went to receive my first flogging; no doubt my
+ small, scared face excited his kind pity. I made it my concern
+ afterward to let him know that I had not cried under the ordeal,
+ and I believe he passed the word around that I had taken my
+ punishment pluckily. So little contact had I with him that beyond
+ constant worship on my part I remember nothing till, about three
+ years later, I received from him a kind, half-joking
+ solicitation, spoken in clean and simple language. So terrific
+ was my shyness and secrecy that I had even then no idea that
+ familiarity of the sort was common enough in schools. I was
+ absolutely unable to connect my own sensations with those of the
+ world at large or to believe that others felt as I did. On this
+ occasion I simply felt that some shrewd thrust had <a name='2_Page_152'></a>been made at
+ me for the detection of my secret. He had drawn me upon his knee;
+ I sat there silent, flushing and dumbfounded. He made no attempt
+ to press me; he had, as he thought, said enough if I chose to be
+ reciprocal; beyond that he would not tempt me. A few years ago I
+ heard of him married and prosperous.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;In following up my emotions in this direction I have far
+ outstripped the period up to which I have given a complete
+ exposition of my development. I must have been more than 12 years
+ old before school life persuaded me to face (as taught by
+ sniggering novices) the actual facts of sexual intercourse. At
+ the same time I learned that I had means of extracting enjoyment
+ from my own body in a definite direction which I had not till
+ then suspected. A growing resistance on my part to his cold
+ desires had led to a break with my former intimate; to the last
+ he had taught me nothing, except distaste for himself. I now
+ found ready teachers right and left of me. One of my
+ schoolfellows invited me to watch; him in the process of
+ masturbation; the spectacle left me quite unmoved; the result
+ appeared to me far less exciting than the discharge of urine
+ which, until then, I had associated with male virility. I was so
+ accustomed to my own lone amorous broodings that the effort and
+ action required for this process, when I attempted to imitate it,
+ disconcerted my thoughts and interfered with concentration on my
+ own inventions. I had never experienced the pleasure accompanying
+ the spasm of emission, and there seemed to be nothing worth
+ trying for along that road. I desisted and returned to my
+ reveries. I was now in a perfect maze of promiscuity; there must
+ have been at least fifty people who attracted me at that time. I
+ developed a liking for imagining myself between two lovers,
+ generally men who were physical contrasts. It was my habit to
+ analyze as minutely as possible those who attracted me. To gain
+ intimacy with what was below the surface I studied with attention
+ their hands, the wrists where they disappeared (showing the hair
+ of the forearm), and the neck; I estimated the comparative size
+ of the generative organs, the formation of the thighs and
+ buttocks, and thus constructed a presentment of the whole man.
+ The more vividly I could do this, the keener was the pleasure I
+ was able to obtain from their contemplated embraces.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;Till now I had been absolutely untouched by any moral scruples.
+ I had the usual acquiescence in the religious beliefs in which I
+ had been trained; it did not enter my head that there was any
+ divine law, one way or the other, concerning the allurements of
+ the imagination. From my thirteenth year slight hints of
+ uneasiness began to creep into my conscience. I began perhaps to
+ understand that the formulas of religion, to which I had listened
+ all my life with as little attention as possible, had some
+ meaning which now and then touched the circumstances of <a name='2_Page_153'></a>my own
+ life. I had not yet realized that my past foretold my future, and
+ that women would be to me a repulsion instead of an attraction
+ where things sexual were concerned. I had the full conviction
+ that one day I should be married; I had also some fear that as I
+ grew to manhood I might succumb to the temptations of loose
+ women. I had an incipient revulsion from such a fate, and this
+ seemed to me to indicate that moral stirrings were at work within
+ me. One night I was amorously attacked in my bedroom by two of
+ the domestics. I experienced an acute horror which I hid under
+ laughter; my resistance was so desperate that I escaped with a
+ tickling. I had been accustomed to sit on the servants' knees, a
+ habit I had innocently retained from childhood; I can now recall
+ in detail the approaches these women had been used to make me. At
+ the time I was utterly oblivious that anything was intended.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I was equally oblivious to things that had a nearer relation to
+ my own feelings. In passing along a side-street one night I was
+ overtaken by a man who began conversation on the weather. He
+ asked me if I were not cold, began passing his hand up and down
+ my back; then came a question about caning at school, whether
+ certain parts of me were not sore, leading to an investigating
+ touch. I put his hand aside shyly, but did not resent the action.
+ Presently he was for exploring my trousers pockets and I began to
+ think him a pickpocket; repulsed in that direction, he returned,
+ to rubbing my back. The sensation was pleasant. I now took him
+ for a pimp who wished to take me to a prostitute, and as at that
+ time I had begun to realize that such pleasures were not to my
+ taste I was glad to find myself at my destination, and said
+ good-bye sharply, leaving him standing full of astonishment at
+ his failure with one who had taken his advances so pleasantly. I
+ could not bring myself to believe that others had the same
+ feelings as myself. Later I realized my escape, not without a
+ certain amount of regret, and constructed for my own pleasure a
+ different termination to the incident.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I was now so possessed by masculine attraction that I became a
+ lover of all the heroes I read of in books. Some became as vivid
+ to me as those with whom I was living in daily contact. For a
+ time I became an ardent lover of Napol&eacute;on (the incident of his
+ anticipation of the nuptials with his second wife attracting me
+ by its impetuous brutality), of Edward I, and of Julius C&aelig;sar.
+ Charles II I remember by a caressing cruelty with which my
+ imagination gifted him. Jugurtha was a great acquisition.
+ Bothwell, Judge Jefferies, and many villains of history and
+ fiction appealed to me by their cruelty.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I had become an adept in the mental construction necessary for
+ the satisfaction of my desires. And yet up to that date I had
+ never seen the nude body of a full-grown adult. I had no
+ knowledge of the extent to which hair in certain instances
+ develops on the torso; indeed, <a name='2_Page_154'></a>my efforts at characterization
+ centered, for the most part, around the thighs and generative
+ organs. At this time one of my schoolfellows saw a common
+ workman, known to me by name, bathing in a stream with some
+ companions; all his body was, my informant told me, covered with
+ hair from throat to belly. In face the man was coarse and
+ repulsive, but I now began to regard him as a lovely monstrosity,
+ and for many nights embraced the vision of him passionately, with
+ face buried in the jungle growth of hair that covered his chest.
+ I was, for the first time, conscious of deliberately (and
+ successfully) willing not to see his face, which was distasteful
+ to me. At the same time another schoolfellow told me, concerning
+ a master who bathed with the boys, that hair showed above his
+ bathing-drawers as high as the navel. I now began definitely to
+ construct bodies in detail; the suggestion of extensive hairiness
+ maddened me with delight, but remained in my mind strongly
+ associated with cruelty; my hairy lovers never behaved to me with
+ tenderness; everything at this period, I think, tended to draw me
+ toward force and violence as an expression of amativeness. A
+ schoolfellow, a few years my senior, of a cruel, bullying
+ disposition, took a particular delight in inflicting pain on me:
+ he had particularly pointed shoes, and it was his custom to make
+ me stand with my back to him while he addressed me in petting and
+ caressing tones; just when his words were at their kindliest he
+ would inflict a sharp stroke with the toe of his boot so as to
+ reach the most tender part of my fundament; the pain was
+ exquisite; I was conscious that he experienced sexual pleasure (I
+ had seen definite signs of it beneath his clothing), and, though
+ loathing him, I would, after I had suffered from his kicks, throw
+ myself into his imaginary embraces and indulge in a perfect rage
+ of abject submission. Yet all the time I would gladly have killed
+ him.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;At the age of 14 I went, for a time, to a farm-house, where I
+ was allowed to mingle familiarly with the farm-laborers, a fine
+ set of muscular young men. I became a great favorite, and, having
+ childish, caressing manners a good deal behind my real age, I was
+ allowed to take many liberties with them. They all lived under
+ the farmer's roof in the old-fashioned way, and in the evening I
+ used to sit on their knees and caress and hug them to my heart's
+ content. They took it phlegmatically; it apparently gave them no
+ surprise. One of the men used to return my squeezes and caresses
+ and once allowed me to put my hand under his shirt, but there
+ were no further liberties.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;It was not until I was nearly 15 that the event happened which
+ made me, for the first time, restless in my enforced solitude. I
+ was verging on puberty, and perhaps in the hope that I should
+ find my own development met by a corresponding warmth I again
+ came into intimate relations with the companion whose frigid
+ performances had caused me <a name='2_Page_155'></a>weariness and disgust. He was now a
+ man, having reached majority. He put me into his bed while he
+ undressed himself and came toward me in perfect nudity. In a
+ moment we were in each other's arms and the deliciousness of that
+ moment intoxicated me. Suddenly, lying on the bed, I felt
+ attacked, as I thought, by an imperative need to make water. I
+ leaped up with a hurried excuse, but already the paroxysm had
+ subsided. No discharge came to my relief, yet the need seemed to
+ have passed. I returned to my companion, but the glamour of the
+ meeting was already over. My companion evidently found more
+ pleasure in my person than when I was a mere child; I felt moved
+ and flattered by the pleasure he took in pressing his face
+ against certain parts of my body. On a second occasion, one day,
+ I seemed involuntarily about to transgress decency, but again, as
+ before, separated myself, and remained ignorant of what it was on
+ which I had verged in my excitement. At another meeting, however,
+ I had been allowed to prolong my embrace and to act, indeed, upon
+ my full instincts. Once more I felt suddenly the coming of
+ something acutely impending; I took my courage in my hands and
+ went boldly forward. In another moment I had hold of the
+ mysterious secret of masculine energy, to which all my years of
+ dilirious imaginings had been but as a waiting at the threshold,
+ the knocking on a closed door.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;It was inevitable that from that day our intimacy should dwindle
+ into dissolution (though other causes anticipated this natural
+ decay), but I no longer found masturbation a dry and wearisome
+ formula. In my novitiate I was disheartened to find how long it
+ took me to dissociate myself from the contemplative and attach
+ myself to the active form of self-gratification. But I presently
+ found myself committed to the repetition of the act three times a
+ day. On almost the last occasion I met my intimate he showed an
+ exceptional ardor. At that meeting he proposed to attempt an act
+ I had not previously considered possible, far less had I heard
+ that it was considered the worst criminal connection that could
+ take place. I had a slight fear of pain, but was willing to
+ gratify him, and for the first time found in my submission a
+ union of the two amative instincts which had before disputed sway
+ in me: the instinct for tenderness and the instinct for cruelty.
+ <i>Pedicatio</i> failed to take place, but I received an embrace which
+ for the first time gave me full satisfaction. My delight was
+ enormous; I was filled with emotions. I have no words to describe
+ the extraordinary charm of the warm, smooth flesh upon mine, and
+ the rougher contact of the hairy parts. Yet I was conscious, even
+ at the time, that this was but the physical side of pleasure, and
+ that he was not and never could be one whom I might truly be said
+ to love.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I was now in my sixteenth year, and under the influence of these
+ and many other emotions then, for the first time, beginning to
+ seize <a name='2_Page_156'></a>me, a sense of literary power and a desire to express
+ myself through imaginative channels began to take hold of me. I
+ feared that my indulgence was having an enfeebling power on my
+ faculties (I had begun to experience physical languor and
+ depression), and certain religious scruples, the result of my
+ early training, took hold of me. For the first time I became
+ conscious that the ardors I felt toward my own sex were a
+ diversion of the sex-instinct itself, and to my astonishment and
+ consternation I found by chance the practices I had already
+ indulged in definitely denounced in the Bible as an abomination.
+ From that moment began a struggle which lasted for years. I made
+ a final breach with my former intimate, and thereupon a long
+ dispute took place between the conflicting influences that strove
+ for possession of my body. For a time I broke off the habit of
+ masturbation, but I could not so easily rid myself of the mental
+ indulgence, which was now almost an essential sedative for
+ inducing sleep. At this time a visit to the seaside, where, for
+ the first time, I was able to see men bathing in complete nudity,
+ frankly, in the full light of day, plunged me again for a time
+ headforemost into imaginative amours, and my scruples and
+ resolutions were flung to the winds. But, on the whole, I had now
+ entered a stage which, for want of a better term, I must describe
+ as the emotionally moral. To whatever depth of indulgence I
+ descended I carried a sense of obliquity with me; I believed that
+ I was a rebel from a law, natural and divine, of which yet no
+ instinct had been implanted in me. I still held unquestioned the
+ truth of the religion I had been brought up in, and my whole
+ life, every thought of my brain, every impulse of my body, were
+ in direct antagonism to the will of God. At times physical desire
+ broke down these barriers, but I practised considerable restraint
+ physically, though not mentally, and made great efforts to
+ conquer my aversion from women and extreme devotion for men,
+ without the slightest success. I was 30, however, before I found
+ a companion to love me in the way my nature required. I am quite
+ a healthy person, and capable of working at very high pressure.
+ Under sexual freedom I have become stronger.&quot;</p>
+
+
+<p> <b>HISTORY XXII.&mdash;</b>T. J., aged 50; man of letters. Height 5 feet 7
+ inches; weight 10 stone, but formerly much less. Belongs to an
+ entirely normal family, all married and with children.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;Owing to the fact that my mother suffered from some malady the
+ whole period of gestation prior to my birth, I came into the
+ world so puny a child, so ill-nourished, that for some time the
+ doctors despaired of my life. Till the age of puberty, though
+ never ill, I suffered greatly from delicate health. I was
+ abnormally sensitive and all my affections and passions
+ extraordinarily developed. Owing to my brothers being much older
+ than myself I was thrown into the society <a name='2_Page_157'></a>of my sister. Till 8
+ years old she was my chief playmate. With her I played with dolls
+ and abandoned myself wholly to the delights of an imaginary land
+ which was much more real to me than the world around me. I never
+ remember learning to read, but at 5 the <i>Arabian Nights</i> and
+ Kingsley's <i>Hereward the Wake</i> were my favorite books. Living in
+ the country the society of other children was difficult to
+ obtain. My whole affections centered in my father, my mother
+ having died when I was a child. This affection for my father was
+ rather a morbid passion which absorbed my life. I dared not leave
+ his side for fear of a final separation from him. I would wake
+ him when asleep to see if he still lived. To this day, though he
+ died twenty-six years ago, his memory haunts me.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;My first abnormal desires were connected with him. I had seen
+ him occasionally micturating in the garden alleys or out in the
+ country. These occasions excited me terribly, and I would, if
+ possible, wait till he had gone, and touch the humid leaves,
+ drawing a terrible pleasure from the contact. Afterward, though
+ he never suspected it, desire for him became a consuming passion,
+ and I remember on one occasion, when on a holiday, I occupied the
+ same bed with him, the excitement of his propinquity brought on
+ such a formidable attack of heart palpitation that my father
+ called in the family physician on our return home. Needless to
+ say my heart was found quite sound. The desire still remains
+ after all these years, and nothing excites me more even now than
+ the memory of my father in his morning bath.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;The whole world for me in my early childhood was peopled with
+ imaginary beings. While still a young child I would invent
+ stories and relate them to any listener I could find, one such
+ story lasting three years. I was an omnivorous reader, but my
+ favorite reading was poetry. At 7 I could repeat the greater part
+ of Longfellow's poems; Scott followed; then Milton captivated me
+ when I was 14; then came Tennyson, Arnold, Swinburne, and Morris.
+ Later came the Greek and Latin poets. From 7 years on I wrote
+ verses to my father. Till 8 years I was excessively timid of the
+ dark and, indeed, of all loneliness. This passed, however, and
+ developed into an extreme sensitiveness of seeing or meeting
+ people. Even on a country road I would walk miles out of my way
+ to avoid meeting the ordinary yokel. At this period my day-dreams
+ were my favorite occupation. Even to the present day my visions
+ take up the greater part of my life. Though timid I was not
+ wanting in courage. At an early age I would fight boys even older
+ than myself. Later I have risked my life many times in various
+ parts of Europe. As regards sports, I can do a little of
+ everything: swimming, riding, fencing, shooting,&mdash;a little of
+ each. Cricket and football I also played passably, but sports
+ never interested me much.<a name='2_Page_158'></a> Literature became and is the passion
+ of my life and for some years has remained my sole occupation.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;At 8 years the sexual inversion began to manifest itself, though
+ till I had attained 10 years of age I was practically quite
+ innocent. At 8 years of age, my family removed to another country
+ and I made the acquaintance of a little boy who attracted me
+ sexually. We masturbated in company, without any reason except
+ the pleasure of seeing each other exposed. Then I had connection
+ with him <i>in anum</i>. This really at that time was an exception to
+ my ordinary tastes which speedily developed into an intense
+ desire of <i>fellatio</i> and later on of intercrural pleasures. This
+ latter perhaps may be accounted for by the visit to our house of
+ a small boy with whom I slept for about a year. Every night
+ during this period, I had intercrural connection with him twice
+ and sometimes three times. Then came a consuming passion for all
+ young boys and very old men. Boys after 14 or 15 ceased to
+ attract me, more particularly when the hair of the pubes began to
+ develop. From 8 to 14, when first I had sexual emissions, I
+ masturbated at every opportunity. From 14 to 27, always once a
+ day, generally twice and sometimes three times a day. At 27 I
+ took rooms and formed acquaintance with the family occupying the
+ house. The boys, one by one, were allowed to sleep with me and I
+ conceived an extraordinary passion for one of them, an attachment
+ which lasted till I finally left England. The attachment was much
+ more that of a man for his wife and had nothing degrading in it.
+ I was wretched when away from him, and as he was very attached to
+ sport of all kinds I suffered 'divers kinds of death' each time
+ that I imagined his life to be endangered. I can honestly say
+ that in each of my attachments, and I have had many, the
+ prevailing sentiment was the delight of protecting a weaker being
+ than myself. Each person whom I have loved has been perfectly
+ normal and all are now fathers of families. Each still regards me
+ with affection and respect in spite of what has passed between
+ us. All my life I have been possessed with the passion for
+ paternity, I could almost say maternity. Willingly would I have
+ suffered the pains of hell could I have borne a son to the person
+ I loved. That I can honestly say has been the dominant instinct
+ of my life. In my passion I have never been brutal, nor save
+ under the influence of wine have I had connection with men over
+ the age of puberty. In Southern Europe my experiences have been
+ the same, a predominant passion for a boy exhibiting itself in
+ every species of protecting care, and though terminating so far
+ as sexual passion was concerned when the boy reached 15 or 16
+ years, yet still lasting and enduring in an honest and unselfish
+ affection. At the age of 51, I still masturbate once or twice a
+ week, though I long for some person whom I love to share the
+ pleasure <a name='2_Page_159'></a>with me. I tried vainly at the age of 27 to bring
+ myself into line with others. Prostitutes caused me horror,
+ whether male or female. I attempted the act of coitus four or
+ five times, twice with women of loose lives and at other times
+ with married women. Save in one case the attempts were either
+ abortive or caused me extreme disgust.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;Practically from the time of puberty I have attracted sexually
+ not only women but men. Women, oddly enough, though I care
+ nothing for them sexually, either hate me or adore me, and I have
+ had five offers of marriage. At the same time up till five years
+ ago, I was pursued by men and have had the oddest experiences
+ both in England and abroad. In the early period of this history I
+ suffered tremendously from the feeling that I was isolated and
+ unique in the world. I strove against the habit of masturbation
+ and my perverted tastes with all my might. Scourges, vigils,
+ burnings, all were of no avail. Deeper reading in the Classics
+ showed me how common was the taste of sex for the same sex. At 27
+ I began to have a settled philosophy. Then as now, I made endless
+ resolutions to avoid masturbation, though I can see nothing wrong
+ in the mutual act of two persons drawn together by love. I am and
+ always have been an extremely religious man, and if I am not
+ altogether an orthodox Catholic, do my duties and have a high
+ sense of the supernatural. I suffered much from melancholy from
+ my earliest years. At 18, though nothing definitely was wrong, a
+ vague but profound <i>malaise</i> induced me to open the veins of my
+ arm. I fainted, however, and was promptly succored. At the age of
+ 35, after a return from abroad, I took an enormous dose of
+ poison. This time again a singular coincidence saved me, and I
+ once more came back to life. After this I purposely went abroad
+ to obtain death and sought it in every possible way. Quite in
+ vain, as you see. One thing I have never had a fear of, but have
+ always longed for&mdash;Death. I am sure that if we only knew what
+ joys lay on the other side of death, the whole world would rush
+ madly to suicide. I have, apart from any perversion of taste, an
+ honest and genuine passion for children and animals, and I am
+ never happier than when in their society. Both adore me.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;My life has not dimmed nor deadened my faculties, for I am
+ occupied at the present time with very important work and I write
+ steadily. But my real life is passed in my visions, which take me
+ into another world quite as real as this sensuous one, and where
+ I always retreat on all occasions possible. And yet, a strange
+ paradox&mdash;I am a convinced Stoic and almost confine my reading to
+ Epictetus, Marcus Aurelius, and the 'Imitation.' I am extremely
+ emotional, fond of the society of women, though I loathe the
+ sexual side of them, and when I love, though passion is certainly
+ inextricably mixed, the prevailing <a name='2_Page_160'></a>sentiment is spiritual. I
+ shall probably end by being a Carthusian or a fakir.&quot;</p>
+
+
+<p> <b>HISTORY XXIII.&mdash;</b>Englishman, aged 70, of German descent on
+ father's side. Was first child of his mother, who was 36 at his
+ birth; a younger brother normal; has no other relatives.</p>
+
+<p> He was brought up in England, and went to school at the age of
+ 13. At a very early age, between 6 and 8, was deeply impressed by
+ the handsome face of a young man, a royal trumpeter on horseback,
+ seen in a procession. This, and the sight of the naked body of
+ young men in a rowing-match on the river, caused great commotion,
+ but not of a definitely sexual character. This was increased by
+ the sight of a beautiful male model of a young Turk smoking, with
+ his dress open in front, showing much of the breast and below the
+ waist. He became familiar with pictures, admired the male figures
+ of Italian martyrs, and the full, rich forms of the Antinous, and
+ he read with avidity the <i>Arabian Nights</i> and other Oriental
+ tales, translations from the classics, Suetonius, Petronius, etc.
+ He drew naked models in life schools, and delighted in male
+ ballet-dancers. As a child, he used to perform in private
+ theatricals; he excelled in female parts, and sang the songs of
+ Madame Vestris, encouraged in this by his father.</p>
+
+<p> The sexual organs have never been fully developed, and the
+ testicles, though large, are of a flabby consistence. He cannot
+ whistle. He thinks he ought to have been a woman.</p>
+
+<p> At school he was shy and reserved, and had no particular intimacy
+ with anyone, although he once desired it. He learned self-abuse
+ from his younger brother, who had learned it from an older boy.
+ He has never had erotic dreams. He never touched anyone but his
+ brother until later when travelling in Italy, and then only his
+ fellow-traveller. When travelling in Asia Minor he had many
+ opportunities, but always put them aside from fear, afterward
+ regretting his fearfulness. He yearned for intimacy with
+ particular friends, but never dared to express it. He went much
+ to theaters, and what he saw there incited him to masturbation.
+ When he was about 30 years of age his reserve, and his fear of
+ treachery and extortion, were at last overcome by an incident
+ which occurred late at night at the Royal Exchange, and again in
+ a dark recess in the gallery of the Olympic Theater when Gustavus
+ Brooke was performing. From that time the Adelphi Theater, the
+ Italian Opera, and the open parks at night became his fields of
+ adventure. He remarks that among people crowding to witness a
+ fire he found many opportunities. His especial intimates were a
+ railway clerk and an Italian model. In more recent years he has
+ chiefly found gratification among footmen and policemen.</p>
+
+<p> He is exclusively passive; also likes mutual <i>fellatio</i>. He used
+ <a name='2_Page_161'></a>greatly to admire finely developed forms (conscious of his own
+ shortcomings), shapely limbs, and delicate brown hair, and always
+ admired strength and manly vigor. He never took any interest in
+ boys, and has always been indifferent to women.</p>
+
+
+<p> <b>HISTORY XXIV.&mdash;</b>A medical man, English, aged 30. He believes that
+ his father, who was a magistrate, was very sympathetic toward
+ men; on several occasions he has sat with him on the bench when
+ cases of indecent assault were brought up; he discharged three
+ cases, although there could be little doubt as to their guilt,
+ and was very lenient to the others.</p>
+
+<p> From the age of 9 he loved to sleep with his brother, ten years
+ older, who was in the navy; they slept in different beds, and the
+ child went to bed early, but he always kept awake to see his
+ brother undress, as he adored his naked body; and would then get
+ into his bed. He learned the habit of masturbation from his
+ brother at the age of 9; at that time there was no sexual orgasm,
+ but watching it in his brother was a perpetual source of wonder
+ and pleasure. During his brother's absence at sea the boy longed
+ for his return and would practice self-abuse with the thought of
+ his brother's naked body before him. This brother's death was a
+ source of great grief. At the age of 12 he went to
+ boarding-school and was constantly falling in love with
+ good-looking boys. He was always taken into one of the bigger
+ boys' beds. At this age he was thoroughly able to enjoy the
+ sexual orgasm with boys. His erotic dreams have always been of
+ men and especially of boys; he has never dreamed sexually of
+ women. From the age of 9 to the age of 21, when he left school,
+ he never gave women a thought sexually, though he always liked
+ their society. For two years after leaving school he had
+ connection with women, not because he thought there was sin in
+ loving his own sex, but because he regarded it as a thing that no
+ one did after leaving school. During these two years he still
+ really preferred men and used to admire the figures of soldiers
+ and sailors. He then paid a visit to London, which may be
+ described in his own words: &quot;I went to see an old schoolfellow
+ who was living there. In his room was a young fellow, fair,
+ extremely good looking, with a good figure and charming manners.
+ From that moment all my past recollections came back. I could not
+ get him out of my mind; in fact, I was in love with him. I
+ pictured him naked before me as a lovely statue; my dreams were
+ frequent at night, always of him. For a fortnight afterward I
+ practised masturbation with the picture of his lovely face and
+ form always before me. We became fast friends, and from that day
+ women have never entered my thoughts.&quot;</p>
+
+<p> Although up to the present he has no wish or intention to marry,
+ he believes that he will eventually do so, because it is thought
+ desirable <a name='2_Page_162'></a>in his profession; but he is quite sure that his love
+ and affection for men and boys will never lessen.</p>
+
+<p> In earlier life he preferred men from 20 to 35; now he likes boys
+ from 16 upward; grooms, for instance, who must be good looking,
+ well developed, cleanly, and of a lovable, unchanging nature; but
+ he would prefer gentlemen. He does not care for mere mutual
+ embracing and reciprocal masturbation; when he really loves a man
+ he desires <i>pedicatio</i> in which he is himself the passive
+ subject.</p>
+
+<p> He has curly hair and moustache, and well-developed sexual
+ organs. His habits are masculine; he has always enjoyed field
+ sports, and can swim, ride, drive, and skate. At the same time,
+ he is devoted to music, can draw and paint, and is an ardent
+ admirer of male statuary. While fond of practical occupations of
+ every sort, he dislikes anything that is theoretical.</p>
+
+<p> He adds: &quot;As a medical man, I fail to see morally any
+ unhealthiness, or anything that nature should be ashamed of, in
+ connection with, and sympathy for, men.&quot;</p>
+
+
+<p> <b>HISTORY XXV.&mdash;</b>A. S. Schoolmaster, aged 46.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;My father was, I should say, below the average in capacity for
+ friendship. He liked young girls, and was never interested in
+ boys. He was a man of strongly Puritanical morality, capable of
+ condemning with gloomy bitterness. He was also a man capable of
+ great sacrifice for principle, and mentally very well endowed. My
+ mother was a clever, practical woman, with wide sympathies. She
+ was capable of warm friendship, especially toward those younger
+ than herself. Her father (whom I never saw) was a teacher. He was
+ devoted to his wife, but also delighted in the company of young
+ men. He had always some young man on his arm, my mother would
+ tell me. My mother's family is of Welsh descent. I learned to
+ read at 5, and I can scarcely have been more than 6 when I used
+ to read again and again David's lament for Absalom. Even now I
+ can dimly recall the siren charm for me of that melancholy
+ refrain, 'O my son Absalom.... O Absalom, my son, my son!' Of
+ late, when I have thought of the amount of devotion I have shown
+ to lads, and the amount I have sometimes suffered for them, I
+ have felt as if there were something almost weirdly prophetic in
+ that early incident.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I was always an impressionable creature. My mother was very
+ musical, and her singing 'got hold' of me wonderfully. The
+ dramatic and the poetic always strongly appealed to me.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I felt I should like to act; but I never dared. In the same way
+ I felt that one day I should like to be a schoolmaster, but I
+ dared not say so. A shy, retiring creature was obviously unfitted
+ for such occupations. Well, the teaching came about, and the
+ strange part <a name='2_Page_163'></a>was that the boys were somehow or other attracted
+ by me, and the 'worst' customers were attracted most. And there
+ came a chance of acting too. Owing to some difficulties about the
+ cast in a play at school, I took a part. After that I <i>knew</i> that
+ (within a certain range) I could act. I spent two holidays with a
+ dramatic company. I should undoubtedly have remained on the
+ stage, but for one thing. I don't wish to be sanctimonious, but
+ dirty and ugly jokes are odious to me. It was this sort of thing
+ that drove me away. I threw myself into the school work instead.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;It was partly the dramatic interest, partly a quite genuine
+ interest in human nature, that led me to do some preaching too.
+ When I had been badly hurt by one or two youngsters whom I loved,
+ I thought of going in for pastoral work, but this too was given
+ up&mdash;and very wisely. I should never be able to work comfortably
+ with any organization. For one thing I have a way of taking on
+ new ideas, and organizations do not like that. For another, all
+ social functions are anathema to me.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;Interest in 'art' as usually understood began to be marked only
+ after I was 30. It started with architecture and passed on to
+ painting and sculpture. The tendency to do rather a variety (too
+ great a variety) of things characterizes many uranians. We are
+ rather like the labile chemical compounds: our molecules readily
+ rearrange themselves.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;As a boy of 10 I had the ordinary sweethearting with a girl of
+ the same age. The incident is worth perhaps a little further
+ comment for the following reason: When I was 16 years old the
+ girl lived with us for a year. She was a nice, pleasant, bright
+ girl, and she thought a great deal of me. I was strongly
+ attracted by her. I remember especially one little incident. I
+ had been showing her how to do some algebra and she was kneeling
+ at the table by the side of my chair. Her hair was flowing over
+ her shoulders and she looked rather charming. She expressed warm
+ admiration of the way I had worked the problem out. I remember
+ that I deliberately squashed out the feeling of attraction that
+ came over me. I scarcely know why I did this; but I fancy there
+ was a vague sense that I did not want my work disturbed. There
+ was no sexual attraction or, at least, none that was manifest.
+ The girl, there is no doubt, grew to love me. I am sorry to say
+ that in two other cases, later, women loved me, and have both
+ permanently remained unmarried on my account. I sometimes feel
+ that in a wisely free society I should be able to give both of
+ these women children. That I believe I could do, and I think it
+ would be an immense satisfaction to them. A permanent union with
+ a woman would, however, be impossible to me. A permanent union
+ with a man would, I believe, be possible. At least I know that
+ attractions which <a name='2_Page_164'></a>have been at all homosexual in character have
+ in my case been very lasting.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I was strongly attracted when not more than 13 to a lad slightly
+ older. It was a love story, there is no doubt, but I do not
+ recollect any outer sexual signs. There were other passing cases,
+ but in no case was there any warm response till I was 15. I then
+ made friends with a lad of entirely different type from myself. I
+ was a reader. I liked long walks and fresh air, but I was too shy
+ to go in for sports. Indeed I was frightfully shy. He was a great
+ sportsman and always at home in society. But he asked me to help
+ him with some work, and we took to working together. I grew
+ passionately fond of him. His caresses always caused some
+ erection. Personally, I believe it would have been wiser to have
+ obtained complete sexual expression. The absence of knowledge led
+ to two distinctly undesirable results. The first was marked
+ congestion and pain at times; the second was a tendency to a sort
+ of modified masochism. There is always, I suppose, some erotic
+ attraction about the buttocks, and of course also, to boys, they
+ afford an irresistibly attractive mark for a good smack. I found
+ that when this lad spanked me it produced some amount of sexual
+ excitement, and the desire for this form of stimulus grew upon
+ me. The result, in my case, was bad. It was sensualism, not love.
+ I can say this with confidence, because in a much later case of
+ deeply passionate love, I shrank from any such method, but the
+ mutual, naked embrace I found was for me an absolutely natural
+ and <i>pure</i> expression of love. I never felt any touch of
+ grossness in it, and it destroyed the earlier and (for me at
+ least) less wholesome desire.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;The school friendship disappeared with the marriage of my
+ friend. I was furiously jealous, and the young man's mother was
+ opposed to me, but I still think of that early friendship with
+ tenderness. I know that my boy friend was the first who made me
+ capable of self-expression, the first who taught me how to make
+ friends at all. And if he still cared for me, I know that his
+ love would be dear to me still.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;My chief regret, as I look back, is that I did not know about
+ these things early. I cannot but think that all youngsters should
+ be spoken to about the love of comrades and encouraged to seek
+ help in any sort of trouble that this may bring. We homogenic
+ folk may be but a small percentage of mankind, but our numbers
+ are still great, and surely the making or marring of our lives
+ should count for something. At college I fell violently in love
+ with a friend with whom I did work in science. He loved me too,
+ though not with such heat. He also was largely uranian, but this
+ I only realized a year or two back. He remains unmarried, and is
+ still my friend. We did some research <a name='2_Page_165'></a>work together which is
+ pretty well known. I am quite sure that the love we had for each
+ other gave tremendous zest to our work and greatly increased our
+ powers.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;While I was working at college I was interested in a lad who was
+ working as errand boy for a city firm. I helped him to get better
+ training, and spent money on him. My father was making me some
+ allowance at the time and demurred. I said I would in future
+ support myself, and in this way came to take up schoolmastering.
+ I at once became quite absorbed in my work with the boys. Of
+ course I loved them. And here I feel I must touch upon what seems
+ to me a characteristic of most of us uranians. Our genital organs
+ are with us ordinarily and usually organs of <i>expression</i>. The
+ clean-minded heterogenic man is apt to look upon such a view of
+ the genital organs as monstrous; we, on the other hand, are
+ compelled (at least for ourselves) to regard it as the natural
+ and pure one. For my own part I had many Puritan
+ prejudices&mdash;prejudices that I retained for many a long and weary
+ day&mdash;but my affection for those of my own sex so often expressed
+ itself by some sexual stirring, and more or less erection, that I
+ was <i>obliged</i> to look upon this as inevitable, and in general I
+ paid no attention to it whatever. It was the older boys' who
+ sometimes attracted me strongly. My love for them was I know a
+ genuinely spiritual thing, though inevitably having some physical
+ expression. I was capable of great devotion to them and sacrifice
+ for them, and I would certainly rather have died than have
+ injured them. The boys got on well with me. I was never weak with
+ them, and I was able to allow all kinds of familiarities without
+ any loss of respect. The older boys usually, out of class, called
+ me by my Christian name, and I remember one writing to ask me
+ whether he might do so, as it made him feel 'nearer' to me. A few
+ of the lads I of course loved with special devotion. They kissed
+ me and loved to have me embrace them. One of these was, I now
+ know, pure uranian, and there was in his case certainly some
+ sexual response, but though I often slept with him, when he was a
+ lad of 17 and 18, there was never any idea in our minds of any
+ sexual act. We are still warm friends, and always kiss when we
+ meet. Looking back upon those days, I feel that I was a little
+ inclined to pass on from one love to another, but each was a
+ genuine devotion, and involved real hard work on the lad's
+ behalf. And I know that where the lad stuck to me into manhood a
+ real tenderness and love remain still.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;While teaching I made the acquaintance of a non-conformist
+ minister, who, though happily married, had certainly some
+ homogenic tendencies. He was most devoted to boys and helped me
+ with regard to some difficult cases. It was the difficult cases
+ that always attracted <a name='2_Page_166'></a>me. I had to punish these lads and my
+ friend recommended spanking with the hand on the bare buttocks. I
+ mention that I adopted this method, because it might have been
+ thought specially dangerous to me. It certainly never produced in
+ me the remotest suggestion of any sexual act, though it did
+ sometimes produce a slight amount of sexual excitement. I
+ disregarded this, or put it out of my mind, as I found the method
+ most efficacious. It was capable of great variation of intensity,
+ and the boys were always ready to joke about it. I never came
+ across a case where any sexual excitement was produced by it. The
+ boys whom I had to be most 'down' on almost always, however, grew
+ fonder of me. There may be a slight and normal masochistic
+ tendency in most boys, and <i>perhaps</i> the erogenic character of
+ the buttocks has something to do with the development of
+ affection. If so, I am inclined to regard it as normal and useful
+ rather than otherwise, for in my experience no undesirable result
+ was ever produced. But then, of course, there was no playing with
+ the business; that might, I am sure, in some cases be decidedly
+ injurious.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;One experience of my schoolmastering days is, I think, important
+ in its bearing upon general sexual psychology. I always noticed
+ that during the term I was specially free from 'wet dreams.' What
+ is noteworthy is this: During term there was never anything more
+ than a very partial sexual expression of any feeling of mine,
+ such expression indeed as was wholly inevitable. There was
+ therefore no actual loss of semen, and it seems clear that the
+ 'wet dreams' were not due to mere physical pressure. The psychic
+ satisfaction of love in this case made the complete physical
+ expression less urgent. But it was a love of a distinctly tender
+ kind that was needed to keep the physical from obtruding. Of that
+ further experience has made me sure. I am, moreover, now
+ convinced that a <i>mutual</i> uranian love will reach its best
+ results, both spiritual and physical, where there is complete
+ sexual expression.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;Of the character of the sexual dreams I have had, there is not
+ much to be said. During the period of masochistic tendency, they
+ were masochistic in character; otherwise they have been dreams
+ simply of the naked embrace. Usually there has been a
+ considerable element of ideal love in the dream. I have not more
+ than three times at most dreamed of intercourse with one of the
+ opposite sex. There was only in one case anything that I could
+ call actual emotion in such a dream. The other dreams have often
+ (not always) been dreams of real yearning, and not at all what I
+ should call merely sensual.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;In the course of time I wanted more freedom to do things in my
+ own way than could be obtained in a public school. I started a
+ school of my own. The work was for a good many years very happy.<a name='2_Page_167'></a>
+ I loved the boys, and they loved me. I was active, ardent, and
+ they made a chum of me. But people got into the way of sending me
+ awkward customers. I poured out my love on these, I used myself
+ up for them. Unfortunately (though I was never 'orthodox') my
+ Puritanical morality was still strong within me, my views of
+ human psychology were too limited, and I imposed them on the
+ boys. Some were very devoted; but, as years went by and the
+ proportion of <i>mauvais sujets</i> increased, there tended to be a
+ split in the small camp and one or two boys whom I loved deceived
+ me terribly. To a man of my temperament this was heart-rending
+ and from then the work was doomed. Troubles at school went along
+ with troubles at home, and these things contributed to center my
+ affection upon a lad who was with me, and who had given me much
+ trouble. For some reason or other I went on believing that he
+ would get right. Deceit was his great difficulty. He was
+ certainly partly homosexual himself. Looking back I can see that
+ with a wider and more charitable knowledge I could have dealt
+ more wisely and helpfully with certain homosexual episodes of
+ his. I am convinced now that mere sweeping condemnation of the
+ physical is not the wholesome way of help. However, to cut the
+ story short, all seemed at last to go well, and the lad was
+ growing into a young man. Our love deepened, and we always slept
+ together, but quite ascetically. Later, when quite in his young
+ manhood he had left school, there was, unfortunately,
+ misunderstandings with his parents, who forbad him to sleep with
+ me. What followed is of some importance. Up till then, though
+ certainly his affection seemed ardent, I had observed no sexual
+ signs on his part. I had been quite frank with him as to mine. He
+ was then 19, and I thought old enough to have things explained to
+ him. Sleeping with him I had found peaceful and helpful, and more
+ than once he told me that it greatly helped him. But <i>after we
+ were forbidden to sleep together</i>, I found the passion in me more
+ difficult to control, and it suddenly leaped out in him. We were
+ still, however, rather ascetic, though we used to kiss each
+ other, and we used to embrace naked. This produced emission not
+ infrequently with me, but only once with him, though always
+ powerful erection. I would not allow any friction. Perhaps this
+ was a mistake. A more complete expression might have helped him.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;All my life I had been hungry for a complete response, and at
+ one time the lad thought he could give it. He was then nearing
+ 20. 'I have never been so happy in my life,' he said. It was a
+ blow to me when I found he had mistaken his own feelings, but I
+ was quite ready to accept what love he could give. I also never
+ dreamed of any sort of insistence on sexual expression. With such
+ love as he could give I was quite ready to make myself content.
+ 'The true measure of love,' wrote a <a name='2_Page_168'></a>uranian schoolmaster to me
+ once, 'is self-sacrifice'; not 'What will you give?' but 'What
+ will you give up?' Not 'What will you do for him?' but 'What will
+ you forego for his sake?' I quote this gladly, for the
+ conventional English moralists regard an invert as a kind of
+ deformed beast. I can only say that I tried to realize the ideal
+ which these words express. No 'moralist' would have helped me one
+ whit. The parents, also, separated us. They have done much harm
+ by their mistake. How difficult it is for parents to allow
+ freedom to their children! Their ideal is successful constraint,
+ not free self-discovery. But in spite of them, and in spite of
+ the separation, I know that my friend and I have helped each
+ other.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;There is one fear parents have which I believe is unwarranted.
+ As far as I have seen, I do not conclude that the early
+ expression of homosexual love prevents heterosexual love from
+ developing later. Where this love is a part of the individual's
+ inborn nature, it will show itself. I do, however, believe that a
+ noble homogenic love in early life will sometimes help a lad to
+ avoid a low standard of heterogenic attachment. The Greeks did
+ well, at their best time, in cultivating and ennobling the
+ homogenic love. Amongst us, as can be understood by all who know
+ the working of society taboos, it is the baser forms that are
+ unhindered, the noblest forms that are debased.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;We urnings are, I think, dependent upon individual love. Many of
+ us, I know, need to work for an individual to do our best. Is
+ this the outcome of the woman in the uranian temperament? And the
+ tragedy of our fate is that we whose souls vibrate only to the
+ touch of the hand of Eros are faced with the fiercest taboo of
+ all that can give our lives meaning. The other taboos have been
+ given up one by one. Will not this, the last of the taboos, soon
+ vanish? I have known lives darkened by it, weakened by it,
+ crushed out by it. How long are the western moralists to maim and
+ brand and persecute where they do not understand?&quot; </p></div>
+
+<p>The next case belongs to a totally different class from all the preceding
+histories. These&mdash;all British or American&mdash;were obtained privately; they
+are not the inmates of prisons or of asylums, and in most cases they have
+never consulted a physician concerning their abnormal instincts. They pass
+through life as ordinary, sometimes as honored, members of society. The
+following case, which happens to be that of an American, is acquainted
+with both the prison and the lunatic asylum. There are several points of
+interest in his history, and he illustrates the <a name='2_Page_169'></a>way in which sexual
+inversion can become a matter of medico-legal importance. I think,
+however, that I am justified in believing that the proportion of sexually
+inverted persons who reach the police-court or the lunatic asylum is not
+much larger in proportion to the number of sexually inverted persons among
+us than it is among my cases. For the documents on which I have founded
+the history of Guy Olmstead I am indebted to the kindness of Dr. Talbot,
+of Chicago, well known from his studies of abnormalities of the jaws and
+face, so often associated with nervous and mental abnormality. He knew the
+man who addressed to him the letters from which I here quote:&mdash;</p>
+
+
+<div class='blkquot'><p><b>HISTORY XXVI.&mdash;</b>On the twenty-eighth of March, 1894, at noon, in
+ the open street in Chicago, Guy T. Olmstead fired a revolver at a
+ letter-carrier named William L. Clifford. He came up from behind,
+ and deliberately fired four shots, the first entering Clifford's
+ loins, the other three penetrating the back of his head, so that
+ the man fell and was supposed to be fatally wounded. Olmstead
+ made little attempt to escape, as a crowd rushed up with the
+ usual cry of &quot;Lynch him!&quot; but waved his revolver, exclaiming:
+ &quot;I'll never be taken alive!&quot; and when a police-officer disarmed
+ him: &quot;Don't take my gun; let me finish what I have to do.&quot; This
+ was evidently an allusion, as will be seen later on, to an
+ intention to destroy himself. He eagerly entered the prison-van,
+ however, to escape the threatening mob.</p>
+
+<p> Olmstead, who was 30 years of age, was born near Danville, Ill.,
+ in which city he lived for many years. Both parents were born in
+ Illinois. His father, some twenty years ago, shot and nearly
+ killed a wealthy coal operator, induced to commit the crime, it
+ is said, by a secret organization of a hundred prominent citizens
+ to whom the victim had made himself obnoxious by bringing suits
+ against them for trivial causes. The victim became insane, but
+ the criminal was never punished, and died a few years later at
+ the age of 44. This man had another son who was considered
+ peculiar.</p>
+
+<p> Guy Olmstead began to show signs of sexual perversity at the age
+ of 12. He was seduced (we are led to believe) by a man who
+ occupied the same bedroom. Olmstead's early history is not clear
+ from the data to hand. It appears that he began his career as a
+ schoolteacher in Connecticut, and that he there married the
+ daughter of a prosperous farmer; but shortly after he &quot;fell in
+ love&quot; with her male cousin, whom he describes as a very handsome
+ young man. This led to a separation from his wife, and he went
+ West.</p><a name='2_Page_170'></a>
+
+<p> He was never considered perfectly sane, and from October, 1886,
+ to May, 1889 he was in the Kankakee Insane Asylum. His illness
+ was reported as of three years' duration, and caused by general
+ ill-health; heredity doubtful, habits good, occupation that of a
+ schoolteacher. His condition was diagnosed as paranoia. On
+ admission he was irritable, alternately excited and depressed. He
+ returned home in good condition.</p>
+
+<p> At this period, and again when examined later, Olmstead's
+ physical condition is described as, on the whole, normal and
+ fairly good. Height, 5 feet 8 inches; weight, 159 pounds. Special
+ senses normal; genitals abnormally small, with rudimentary penis.
+ His head is asymmetrical, and is full at the occiput, slightly
+ sunken at the bregma, and the forehead is low. His cephalic index
+ is 78. The hair is sandy, and normal in amount over head, face,
+ and body. His eyes are gray, small, and deeply set; the zygom&aelig;
+ are normal. The nose is large and very thin. There is arrested
+ development of upper jaw. The ears are excessively developed and
+ malformed. The face is very much lined, the nasolabial fissure is
+ deeply cut, and there are well-marked horizontal wrinkles on the
+ forehead, so that he looks at least ten years older than his
+ actual age. The upper jaw is of partial V-shape, the lower well
+ developed. The teeth and their tubercles and the alveolar process
+ are normal. The breasts are full. The body is generally well
+ developed; the hands and feet are large.</p>
+
+<p> Olmstead's history is defective for some years after he left
+ Kankakee. In October, 1892, we hear of him as a letter-carrier in
+ Chicago. During the following summer he developed a passion for
+ William Clifford, a fellow letter-carrier about his own age, also
+ previously a schoolteacher, and regarded as one of the most
+ reliable and efficient men in the service. For a time Clifford
+ seems to have shared this passion, or to have submitted to it,
+ but he quickly ended the relationship and urged his friend to
+ undergo medical treatment, offering to pay the expenses himself.
+ Olmstead continued to write letters of the most passionate
+ description to Clifford, and followed him about constantly until
+ the latter's life was made miserable. In December, 1893, Clifford
+ placed the letters in the postmaster's hands, and Olmstead was
+ requested to resign at once. Olmstead complained to the Civil
+ Service Commission at Washington that he had been dismissed
+ without cause, and also applied for reinstatement, but without
+ success.</p>
+
+<p> In the meanwhile, apparently on the advice of friends, he went
+ into hospital, and in the middle of February, 1894, his testicles
+ were removed. No report from the hospital is to hand. The effect
+ of removing the testicles was far from beneficial, and he began
+ to suffer from hysterical melancholia. A little later he went
+ into hospital again.<a name='2_Page_171'></a> On March 19th he wrote to Dr. Talbot from
+ the Mercy Hospital, Chicago: &quot;I returned to Chicago last
+ Wednesday night, but felt so miserable I concluded to enter a
+ hospital again, and so came to Mercy, which is very good as
+ hospitals go. But I might as well go to Hades as far as any hope
+ of my getting well is concerned. I am utterly incorrigible,
+ utterly incurable, and utterly impossible. At home I thought for
+ a time that I was cured, but I was mistaken, and after seeing
+ Clifford last Thursday I have grown worse than ever so far as my
+ passion for him is concerned. Heaven, only knows how hard I have
+ tried to make a decent creature out of myself, but my vileness is
+ uncontrollable, and I might as well give up and die. I wonder if
+ the doctors knew that after emasculation it was possible for a
+ man to have erections, commit masturbation, and have the same
+ passion as before. I am ashamed of myself; I hate myself; but I
+ can't help it. I have friends among nice people, play the piano,
+ love music, books, and everything that is beautiful and
+ elevating; yet they can't elevate me, because this load of inborn
+ vileness drags me down and prevents my perfect enjoyment of
+ anything. Doctors are the only ones who understand and know my
+ helplessness before this monster. I think and work till my brain
+ whirls, and I can scarce refrain from crying out my troubles.&quot;
+ This letter was written a few days before the crime was
+ committed.</p>
+
+<p> When conveyed to the police station Olmstead completely broke
+ down and wept bitterly, crying: &quot;Oh! Will, Will, come to me! Why
+ don't you kill me and let me go to him!&quot; (At this time he
+ supposed he had killed Clifford.) A letter was found on him, as
+ follows: &quot;Mercy, March 27th. To Him Who Cares to Read: Fearing
+ that my motives in killing Clifford and myself may be
+ misunderstood, I write this to explain the cause of this homicide
+ and suicide. Last summer Clifford and I began a friendship which
+ developed into love.&quot; He then recited the details of the
+ friendship, and continued: &quot;After playing a Liszt rhapsody for
+ Clifford over and over, he said that when our time to die came he
+ hoped we would die together, listening to such glorious music as
+ that. Our time has now come to die, but death will not be
+ accompanied by music. Clifford's love has, alas! turned to deadly
+ hatred. For some reason Clifford suddenly ended our relations and
+ friendship.&quot; In his cell he behaved in a wildly excited manner,
+ and made several attempts at suicide; so that he had to be
+ closely watched. A few weeks later he wrote to Dr. Talbot: &quot;Cook
+ County Gaol, April 23. I feel as though I had neglected you in
+ not writing you in all this time, though you may not care to hear
+ from me, as I have never done anything but trespass on your
+ kindness. But please do me the justice of thinking that I never
+ expected all this trouble, as<a name='2_Page_172'></a> I thought Will and I would be in
+ our graves and at peace long before this. But my plans failed
+ miserably. Poor Will was not dead, and I was grabbed before I
+ could shoot myself. I think Will really shot himself, and I feel
+ certain others will think so, too, when the whole story comes out
+ in court. I can't understand the surprise and indignation my act
+ seemed to engender, as it was perfectly right and natural that
+ Will and I should die together, and nobody else's business. Do
+ you know I believe that poor boy will yet kill himself, for last
+ November when I in my grief and anger told his relations about
+ our marriage he was so frightened, hurt, and angry that he wanted
+ us both; to kill ourselves. I acquiesced gladly in this proposal
+ to commit suicide, but he backed out in a day or two. I am glad
+ now that Will is alive, and am glad that I am alive, even with
+ the prospect of years of imprisonment before me, but which I will
+ cheerfully endure for his sake. And yet for the last ten months
+ his influence has so completely controlled me, both body and
+ soul, that if I have done right he should have the credit for my
+ good deeds, and if I have done wrong he should be blamed for the
+ mischief, as I have not been myself at all, but a part of him,
+ and happy to merge my individuality into his.&quot;</p>
+
+<p> Olmstead was tried privately in July. No new points were brought
+ out. He was sentenced to the Criminal Insane Asylum. Shortly
+ afterward, while still in the prison at Chicago, he wrote to Dr.
+ Talbot: &quot;As you have been interested in my case from a scientific
+ point of view, there is a little something more I might tell you
+ about myself, but which I have withheld, because I was ashamed to
+ admit certain facts and features of my deplorable weakness. Among
+ the few sexual perverts I have known I have noticed that all are
+ in the habit of often closing the mouth with the lower lip
+ protruding beyond the upper. [Usually due to arrested development
+ of upper jaw.] I noticed the peculiarity in Mr. Clifford before
+ we became intimate, and I have often caught myself at the trick.
+ Before that operation my testicles would swell and become sore
+ and hurt me, and have seemed to do so since, just as a man will
+ sometimes complain that his amputated leg hurts him. Then, too,
+ my breasts would swell, and about the nipples would become hard
+ and sore and red. Since the operation there has never been a day
+ that I have been free from sharp, shooting pains down the abdomen
+ to the scrotum, being worse at the base of the penis. Now that my
+ fate is decided, I will say that really my passion for Mr.
+ Clifford is on the wane, but I don't know whether the improvement
+ is permanent or not. I have absolutely no passion for other men,
+ and have begun to hope now that I can yet outlive my desire for
+ Clifford, or at least control it. I have not yet told of this
+ improvement in my condition, because I wished people to still
+ think I was insane, so that<a name='2_Page_173'></a> I would be sure to escape being sent
+ to the penitentiary. I know I was insane at the time I tried to
+ kill both Clifford and myself, and feel that I don't deserve such
+ a dreadful punishment as being sent to a State prison. However, I
+ think it was that operation and my subsequent illness that caused
+ my insanity rather than passion for Clifford. I should very much
+ like to know if you really consider sexual perversion an
+ insanity.&quot;</p>
+
+<p> When discharged from the Criminal Insane Asylum, Olmstead
+ returned to Chicago and demanded his testicles from the City
+ Postmaster, whom he accused of being in a systematized conspiracy
+ against him. He asserted that the postmaster was one of the chief
+ agents in a plot against him, dating from before the castration.
+ He was then sent to the Cook Insane Hospital. It seems probable
+ that a condition of paranoia is now firmly established. </p></div>
+
+<p>The following cases are all bisexual, attraction being felt toward both
+sexes, usually in predominant degree toward the male:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class='blkquot'><p><b>HISTORY XXVII.&mdash;</b>H. C., American, aged 28, of independent means,
+ unmarried, the elder of two children. His history may best be
+ given in his own words:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I am on both sides distantly of English ancestry, the first
+ colonists of my name having come to New England in 1630. Both my
+ mother's and my father's families have been prolific in soldiers
+ and statesmen; my mother's contributed one president to the
+ United States. So far as I am aware, none of my antecedents have
+ betrayed mental vagaries, except a maternal uncle, who, from
+ overstudy, became for a year insane.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I am a graduate of two universities with degrees in arts and
+ medicine. After a year as physician in a hospital, I relinquished
+ medicine altogether, to follow literature, a predilection since
+ early boyhood.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I awoke to sexual feeling at the age of 7, when, at a small
+ private school, glimpsing bare thighs above the stockings of girl
+ schoolmates, I dimly exulted. This fetishism, as it grew more
+ definite, centered at last upon the thighs and then the whole
+ person of one girl in particular. My first sexually tinged dream
+ was of her&mdash;that while she stood near I impinged my penis upon a
+ red-hot anvil and then, in beatific self-immolation, exhibited
+ the charred stump to her wondering, round eyes. This love,
+ however, abated at the coming of a new girl to the school, who,
+ not more beautiful, but more buxom, made stronger appeal to my
+ nascent sexuality. One afternoon, in the loft of her <a name='2_Page_174'></a>father's
+ stable, she induced me to disrobe, herself setting the example.
+ The erection our mutual handlings produced on me was without
+ conscious impulse; I felt only a childish curiosity on beholding
+ our genital difference. But the episode started extravagant
+ whimsies, one of which persistently obsessed me: with these
+ obviously compensatory differences, why might not the girl and I
+ effect some sort of copulation? This fantasy, drawn exclusively
+ from that unique experience, charmed with its grotesqueness only,
+ for at that time my sense of sex was but inchoate and my
+ knowledge of it was nothing. The bizarre conceit, submitted to
+ the equally ignorant girl and approved, was borne to the paternal
+ hay-loft and there, with much bungling, brought to surprising and
+ pleasurable consummation.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;In the four ensuing years I repeated the act not seldom with
+ this girl and with others.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;When I was 11 my sister and I were taken by our parents to
+ Europe, where we remained six years, attending school each winter
+ in a different city and, during the summer, travelling in various
+ countries.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;Abroad my lust was glutted to the full: the amenable
+ girl-playmate was ubiquitous, whom I plied with ardor at Swiss
+ hotels, German watering-places, French pensions,&mdash;where not?
+ Toward puberty I first repaired at times to prostitutes.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;Masturbation, excepting a few experiments, I never resorted to.
+ Few of my schoolmates avowedly practised it.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;Of homosexuality my sole hearing was through the classics,
+ where, with no long pondering, I opined it merely our modern
+ comradery, poetically aggrandized, masquerading in antique
+ habiliments and phraseology. It never came home to me; it attuned
+ to no tone in the scale of my sympathies; I possessed no
+ touchstone for transmitting the recitals of those ambiguous
+ amours into fiery messages. The relation to my own sex was,
+ intellectually, an occasional friendship devoid of strong
+ affection; physically, a mild antagonism, the naked body of a man
+ was slightly repellant. Statues of women evoked both carnal and
+ esthetic response; of men, no emotions whatever, save a deepening
+ of that native antipathy. Similarly in paintings, in literature,
+ the drama, the men served but as foils for the delicious maidens,
+ who visited my a&euml;rial seraglios and lapped me in roseate
+ dreamings.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;In my eighteenth year we returned to America, where I entered
+ the university.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;The course of my love of women was now a little erratic; normal
+ connection began to lose fascination. As long ago I had
+ formulated untutored the <i>rationale</i> of coitus, so now
+ imagination, groping in the dark, conceived a fresh fillip for
+ the appetite&mdash;<i>cunnilinctus</i>. But this, <a name='2_Page_175'></a>though for a while quite
+ adequate, soon ceased to gratify. At this juncture, Christmas of
+ my first college year, I was appointed editor of a small
+ magazine, an early stricture of whose new conduct was paucity of
+ love stories. Such improvident neglect was in keeping with my
+ altering view of women, a view accorded to me by self-dissipation
+ of the glamour through which they had been wont to appear. I had
+ wandered somehow behind the scenes, and beheld, no footlights of
+ sex intervening, the once so radiant fairies resolved into a
+ raddled humanity, as likable as ever, but desirable no longer.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;Soon after this the Oscar Wilde case was bruiting about. The
+ newspaper accounts of it, while illuminating, flashed upon me no
+ light of self-revelation; they only amended some idle conjectures
+ as to certain mystic vices I had heard whispered of. Here and
+ there a newspaper allusion still too recondite was painstakingly
+ clarified by an effeminate fellow-student, who, I fancy now,
+ would have shown no reluctance had I begged him to adduce
+ practical illustration. I purchased, too, photographs of Oscar
+ Wilde, scrutinizing them under the unctuous auspices of this same
+ emasculate and blandiloquent mentor. If my interest in Oscar
+ Wilde arose from any other emotion than the rather morbid
+ curiosity then almost universal, I was not conscious of it.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;Erotic dreams, precluded hitherto by coition, came now to beset
+ me. The persons of these dreams were (and still are) invariably
+ women, with this one remembered exception: I dreamed that Oscar
+ Wilde, one of my photographs of him incarnate, approached me with
+ a buffoon languishment and perpetrated <i>fellatio</i>, an act
+ verbally expounded shortly before by my oracle. For a month or
+ more, recalling this dream disgusted me.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;The few subsequent endeavors, tentative and half-hearted, to
+ repristinate my venery were foredoomed, partly because I had
+ feared they were, to failure: erection was incomplete,
+ ejaculation without pleasure.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;There seemed a fallacy in this behavior. Why coitus without
+ sensual desire for it? No sense of duty impelled me, nor dread of
+ sexual aberration. The explanation is this: attraction to females
+ was not expunged, simply sublimed; my imagination, no longer
+ importing women from observation, created its own delectable
+ sirens, grown exacting and transcendental, petitioned reality in
+ vain. Substance had receded for good now, and soon even these
+ tormenting shadows of it became ever dimmer and dimmer, until
+ they too at length faded into nothingness.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;The antipodes of the sexual sphere turned more and more toward
+ the light of my tolerance. Inversion, till now stained with a
+ slight repugnance, became esthetically colorless at last, and
+ then <a name='2_Page_176'></a>delicately retinted, at first solely with pity for its
+ victims, but finally, the color deepening, with half-conscious
+ inclination to attach it to myself as a remote contingency. This
+ revolution, however, was not without external impetus. The
+ prejudiced tone of a book I was reading, Krafft-Ebing's
+ <i>Psychopathia Sexualis</i>, by prompting resentment, led me on to
+ sympathy. My championing, purely abstract though it was to begin
+ with, none the less involved my looking at things with eyes
+ hypothetically inverted,&mdash;an orientation for the sake of
+ argument. After a while, insensibly and at no one moment,
+ hypothesis merged into reality: I myself was inverted. That
+ occasional and fictitious inversion had never, I believe,
+ superposed this true inversion; rather a true inversion, those
+ many years dormant, had simply responded finally to a stimulus
+ strong and prolonged enough, as a man awakens when he is loudly
+ called.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;In presenting myself thus sexually transformed, I do not aver
+ having had at the outset any definitive inclination. The instinct
+ so freshly evolved remained for a while obscure. Its primary
+ expression was a feebly sensuous interest in the physical
+ character of boys&mdash;in their feminine resemblances especially. To
+ this interest I opposed no discountenance; for wantonness with
+ women under many and diverse conditions having long ago medicined
+ my sexual conscience to lethargy, no access of reasons came to me
+ now for its refreshment. On the other hand, intellectual delight
+ in the promises of the new world, as well as sensuality, conduced
+ to its deliberate exploration. Still, for a year, the yearning
+ settled with true lust upon no object more concrete than youths
+ whose only habitation was my fancy.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;A young surgeon, having read my copy of <i>Psychopathia Sexualis</i>,
+ fell one evening to discussing inverts with such relish that I
+ inquired ingenuously if he himself was one. He colored, whether
+ confirmatively or otherwise I could not guess, in spite of his
+ vehement no. Presently he very subtly recanted his denial. But to
+ his counter-question I maintained my own no, lest he propose some
+ sexual act, a point the esthetics of my developing inversion
+ would not yet concede, the boys of my imagination being still
+ predominant.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;One evening, soon after this, he convoyed me to several of the
+ caf&eacute;'s where inverts are accustomed to foregather. These trysting
+ places were much alike: a long hall, with sparse orchestra at one
+ end, marble-topped tables lining the walls, leaving the floor
+ free for dancing. Round the tables sat boys and youths, Adonises
+ both by art and nature, ready for a drink or a chat with the
+ chance Samaritan, and shyly importunate for the pleasures for
+ which, upstairs, were small rooms to let. One of the boys,
+ supported by the orchestra, sang the 'Jewel Song' out of
+ '<i>Faust</i>.' His voice had the limpid, treble purity <a name='2_Page_177'></a>of a
+ clarinet, and his face the beauty of an angel. The song
+ concluded, we invited him to our table, where he sat sipping neat
+ brandy, as he mockingly encountered my book-begotten queries. The
+ boy-prostitutes gracing these halls, he apprised us, bore
+ fanciful names, some of well-known actresses, others of heroes in
+ fiction, his own being Dorian Gray. Rivals, he complained, had
+ assumed the same appellation, but he was the original Dorian; the
+ others were jealous impostors. His curly hair was golden; his
+ cheeks were pink; his lips, coral red, parted incessantly to
+ reveal the glistening pearliness of his teeth. Yet, though
+ deeming him the beautifulest youth in the world, I experienced no
+ sexual interest either in him or in the other boys, who indeed
+ were all beautiful&mdash;beauty was their chief asset. Dorian,
+ further, dilated on the splendor of his female attire, satin
+ corsets, low-cut evening gowns, etc., donned on gala nights to
+ display his gleaming shoulders and dimpled, plump, white arms.
+ Thus arrayed, he bantered, he would bewitch even me, now so
+ impassive, until I should throw myself, in tears of happiness,
+ into his loving embrace.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;My first venture upon <i>fellatio</i> was a month later, with the
+ young surgeon. I confessed the whim to try it, and he acceded.
+ Though this nauseous and fatiguing act, very imperfectly
+ performed, was prompted mostly by curiosity, there arose soon a
+ passional hankering for repetition. In short, appetence for
+ <i>fellatio</i> grew slowly from the night of that mawkish fiasco and
+ waxed eventually into a sovereign want.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;Perhaps miscarriage of that initiatory experiment was due to
+ precipitance, incubation of my perverse instinct being not yet
+ complete. A hiatus of a month now supervened, in which, while
+ further <i>fellatio</i> was not attempted, my mind came always nearer
+ to a reconcilement with the grossness of the act, and began to
+ discover for its creatures some correlation in pretty boys beheld
+ in the flesh. One evening, in Broadway, I conceived suddenly a
+ full-fledged desire for a youth issuing from an hotel as I
+ passed. Our glances met and dwelled together. At a shop-window he
+ first accosted me. He was an invert. With him, in his room at the
+ hotel whence I had seen him emerge, I passed an apocalyptic
+ night. Thereafter commerce with boys only in the spirit ceased to
+ be an end; the images were carnalized, stepped from their
+ framework into the streets. That boy, that god out of the
+ machine, I see him clearly: his brown, curling hair; his eyes
+ blue as the sea; his chest both arched and so plump, his rounded
+ arms, his taper waist, the graceful swell of his hips and full,
+ snowy thighs; I recall as of yesterday the dimples in his knees,
+ the slenderness of his ankles, the softness of his little feet,
+ with insteps pink like the inside of a shell. How I gloated over
+ his ample roundness, his rich undulations!</p><a name='2_Page_178'></a>
+
+<p> &quot;In the last eight years I have performed <i>fellatio</i> (never
+ <i>pedicatio</i>) with more than three hundred men and boys. My
+ preference is for boys between 15 and 20, refined, pretty,
+ girlish, and themselves homosexual.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;Personally, barring this love for males, I am in all ways
+ masculine, given to outdoor sports, and to smoking and drinking
+ moderately. In appearance I am but a boy of 18. My face and
+ figure are generally considered beautiful: I am clean-shaved,
+ with black, curling hair, red cheeks and brown eyes; features
+ delicate and regular; body, of medium height, everywhere
+ practically hairless. By years of training I have attained alike
+ great strength and classic proportions, the muscular contours
+ smoothly rounded with adipose tissue. My hands and feet are
+ small. My penis, though perfectly shaped, is rather
+ enormous&mdash;erect, ten and a half inches in length, seven and a
+ quarter inches in circumference.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;Some abetment of my apostasy from orthodox methods was, no
+ doubt, this hypertrophy of the penis, which already in my
+ twentieth year had acquired its present redundance, rendering
+ coitus impracticable with most women I essayed and painful where
+ insertion was effected. Since falling heir to inversion, a unique
+ recurrence of normal desire, six years ago, persuaded me to
+ attempt coitus with eleven or twelve prostitutes, and, strangely
+ enough, with much of the old-time salacity and full erection,
+ but, as it chanced, always with too great disparity of parts for
+ success.&quot;</p>
+
+<p> A certain preciosity in the manner of this communication may be
+ put down partly to the nature of the literary avocations with
+ which the writer is by preference occupied, and partly, no doubt
+ more fundamentally, to the special character of his predominantly
+ esthetic temperament and attraction to the exotic. An attraction
+ for exotic experiences will not, however, suffice to account for
+ the rather late development of homosexual tendencies, a late
+ development which may be held to place this case in the retarded
+ group of inverts. H. C. has himself pointed out to me that his
+ aversion to women, beginning to appear in the eighteenth year,
+ was already well pronounced before he had ever heard definitely
+ of specific homosexual acts, and fully a year before he
+ experienced the slightest sexual interest in men or boys.
+ Moreover, while it is true that the actual tendency to homosexual
+ attraction only appeared after he had read Krafft-Ebing and come
+ in contact with inverts, such influences would not suffice to
+ change the sexual nature of a normally constituted man.</p>
+
+<p> It may be added that H. C. is not attracted to normal males. As
+ regards his moral attitude he remarks: &quot;I have no scruples in the
+ indulgence of my passion. I perceive the moral objections
+ advanced, <a name='2_Page_179'></a>but how speculative they are, and constructive; while,
+ immediately, inversion is the source of so much good.&quot; He looks
+ upon the whole sexual question as largely a matter of taste. </p></div>
+
+<p>I regard the foregoing case as of considerable interest. It presents what
+is commonly supposed to be a very common type of inversion, Oscar Wilde
+being the supreme exemplar, in which a heterosexual person apparently
+becomes homosexual by the exercise of intellectual curiosity and esthetic
+interest. In reality the type is far from common; indeed, an intellectual
+curiosity and an esthetic interest, strong enough even apparently to
+direct the sexual impulse in any new channel, are themselves far from
+common. Moreover, a critical reading of this history suggests that the
+apparent control over the sexual impulse by reason is merely a superficial
+phenomenon. Here, as ever, reason is but a tool in the hands of the
+passions. The apparent causes are really the results; we are witnessing
+the gradual emergence of a retarded homosexual impulse.</p>
+
+
+<div class='blkquot'><p><b>HISTORY XXVIII.&mdash;</b>English, aged 40, surgeon. Sexual experiences
+ began early, about the age of 10, when a companion induced him to
+ play at intercourse with their sisters. He experienced no
+ pleasure. A little later a servant-girl began to treat him
+ affectionately and at last called him into her bedroom when she
+ was partially undressed, fondled and kissed his member, and
+ taught him to masturbate her. On subsequent occasions she
+ attempted a simulation of intercourse, which gave her
+ satisfaction, but failed to induce emission in him. On returning
+ to school mutual masturbation was practised with schoolfellows,
+ and the first emission took place at the age of 14.</p>
+
+<p> On leaving school he became a slave to the charms of women, and
+ had frequent coitus about the age of 17, but he preferred
+ masturbating girls and especially in persuading girls of good
+ position, to whom the experience was entirely novel, to allow him
+ to take liberties with them. At 25 he became engaged, and mutual
+ masturbation was practised to excess during the engagement; after
+ marriage connection generally took place twice every twenty-four
+ hours until pregnancy.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;At this time,&quot; he writes, &quot;I stayed at the house of an old
+ school-fellow, due of my lovers of old days. There were so many
+ guests that I shared my friend's bedroom. The sight of his body
+ gave rise to lustful feelings, and when the light was out I stole
+ across to his bed. He made no objection, and we passed the night
+ in mutual masturbation.<a name='2_Page_180'></a> We passed the next fortnight together,
+ and I never took the same pleasure in coitus with my wife, though
+ I did my duty. She died five years later, and I devoted myself
+ heart and soul to my friend until his death by accident last
+ year. Since then I have lost all interest in life.&quot;</p>
+
+<p> I am indebted for this case to a well-known English alienist, who
+ remarks that the patient is fairly healthy to look at, but with
+ neurasthenia and tendency to melancholia, and neurotic
+ temperament. The body is masculine and pubic hair abundant. One
+ testicle shows wasting.</p>
+
+
+<p> <b>HISTORIES XXIX AND XXX.&mdash;</b>I give the following narrative in the
+ words of an intimate friend of one of the cases in question: &quot;My
+ attention was first drawn to the study of inversion&mdash;though I
+ then regarded all forms of it as depraving and abominable&mdash;at a
+ public school, where in our dormitory a boy of 15 initiated his
+ select friends into the secrets of mutual masturbation, which he
+ had learned from his brother, a midshipman. I gave no heed to
+ this at the time, though I remembered it in after-years when
+ immersed in Plato, Lucretius, and the Epicurean writers. But my
+ attention was riveted to it at the age of 20, when I spent a
+ holiday with A., a companion with whom I was, and still am, on
+ terms of great friendship. We enjoyed many things in common,
+ studied together and discussed most unconventional matters, but
+ not this. Previously we had always occupied separate sleeping
+ apartments; on this occasion we were abroad in a country place,
+ and were compelled to put up with what we could get. We not only
+ had to share a room, but a bed. I was not surprised at his
+ throwing his arm over me, as I knew he was extraordinarily
+ attached to me, and I had always felt a brute for not returning
+ his affection so warmly. But I was surprised when later I awoke
+ to find him occupied in <i>fellatio</i> and endeavoring to obtain my
+ response. Had it been anyone else I should have resented strongly
+ such a liberty, and our acquaintance would have ended, but I
+ cared for him too well, though never very demonstrative. This
+ episode led to discussion of the topic. He told me that his
+ sexual strength was great, that he had tested it in many ways,
+ and that it was essential to his well-being that he should have
+ satisfaction in some way. He loathed prostitution and considered
+ it degrading; he felt physically attracted to some women and
+ intellectually to others, but the two elements were never
+ combined, and though he had been intimate with a few he felt that
+ it was not right to them, as he could not marry them because he
+ held too high an ideal of marriage. He had always felt attracted
+ to his own sex, and had kept up a Platonic friendship with a
+ college chum, X (to whom I knew he was passionately attached),
+ for some years. Both considered it perfectly moral, and both,
+ felt better for it. Both abhor <i>pedicatio</i>. X., however, <a name='2_Page_181'></a>would
+ never discuss the subject, and seemed half-ashamed of it. A., on
+ the other hand, though showing a great self-respect in all things
+ else, feels no shame, though he says he would never discuss it
+ except with close friends or if asked for private advice.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;A. is the elder child of a military officer. His parents were 21
+ and 19, respectively, at the time of his birth. Both parents are
+ healthy, and the two children (both boys) have good
+ constitutions, though the elder has the better. He is of medium
+ height and slender limbs, proud carriage, handsome and
+ intellectual face (classic Greek type), excellent complexion,
+ charming manners, and good temper. The penis is large, the
+ foreskin very short. He is fond of philosophy, natural science,
+ history, and literature. He is reflective and patient rather than
+ smart, but strong-willed and very active when roused, never
+ resting till he has accomplished what he wants, even if this
+ takes years. He sings excellently, and is fond of cycling,
+ boating, swimming, and mountain-climbing. He enjoys excellent
+ health, and has never had a day's illness since he was 12 years
+ of age. He says the only time he cannot sleep has been when in
+ bed with some one who could not or would not satisfy him. He
+ requires satisfaction at least once a week, twice or thrice in
+ the hot season. He never smokes, nor drinks beer or spirits. He
+ is still single, but believes that marriage would meet all his
+ needs.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;X. is also an oldest child, of young and healthy parents
+ (between 21 and 24 at his birth) of different class; father a
+ builder. He is of pleasing, but not handsome, appearance; very
+ sensitive, very neat, and methodical in all things; not very
+ strong-willed, and very reserved to women. He is of very studious
+ disposition, especially fond of philosophy, politics, and natural
+ science; a good musician. Takes moderate exercise, but rather
+ easily fatigued. Is generally healthy, but not overstrong. He is
+ a vegetarian, and was brought up as a free-thinker. Until two
+ years ago he was never attracted toward a girl; indeed, he
+ disliked girls; but he is now engaged. For about eighteen months,
+ he has relinquished homosexuality, but has suffered from dreams,
+ bad digestion, and peevishness since. He thinks the only remedy
+ is marriage, which he is pushing on. He regards homosexuality as
+ quite natural and normal, though his desires are not strong, and
+ once a fortnight has always satisfied him. He was led to the
+ practice by the reasoning of A., and because he felt a certain
+ vague need, and this comforted him. He thinks it a matter of
+ temperament and not to be discussed, except by scientists. He
+ says he could never perform it except with his dearest friend,
+ whose request he could not resist. He has a long foreskin, flesh
+ like a woman's, and is well proportioned.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;Both men are ardent for social reform, the one actively, the
+ other passively engaged in it. Both also regard the law as to
+ homosexuality <a name='2_Page_182'></a>as absurd and demoralizing. They also think that
+ the law prohibiting polygamy is largely the cause of
+ prostitution, as many women are prevented from living honest
+ lives and being cared for by someone, and many men could marry
+ one woman for physical satisfaction and another for intellectual.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;They were devoted to each other when I first knew them; they are
+ still friends, but separated by distance. Both are exceedingly
+ honorable, and the latter is truthful to a fault.&quot;</p>
+
+<p> According to later information X. had married and his homosexual
+ tendencies were almost completely in abeyance, partly, perhaps,
+ owing to the fact that he now lives quietly in the country. A.
+ has surprised his friends by his ardent attachment to a lady of
+ about his own age to whom he has become engaged. He declares that
+ he loves this woman better than any man, but nevertheless he
+ still feels strong passion for his men friends. It is evident
+ that the homosexual tendency in A. is distinctly more pronounced
+ than in his friend X. As is found more often in bisexual than in
+ homosexual persons, he is of predominantly masculine type,
+ possesses great vitality, and desires to exert all his faculties.
+ He has a sound nervous system and is very free from all
+ &quot;nervousness.&quot; He has written a scientific treatise and can study
+ undisturbed amid violent noises. His voice is manly (in singing
+ deep base). He can whistle. He is not vain, though well formed,
+ and his hands are delicate. His favorite color is green. The
+ demonstrative warmth of his affection for his friends is the
+ chief feminine trait noted in him. He rarely dreams and has never
+ had an erotic dream; this he explains by saying (earlier than
+ Freud) that all dreams not caused by physical conditions are
+ wish-dreams, and as he always satisfies his sexual needs at once,
+ with a friend or by masturbation, his sexual needs have no
+ opportunity of affecting his subconscious life. </p></div>
+
+<p>There may be some doubt as to the classification of the two foregoing
+cases: they are not personally known to me. The following case, with which
+I have been acquainted for many years, I regard as clearly a genuine
+example of bisexuality:&mdash;</p>
+
+
+<div class='blkquot'><p><b>HISTORY XXXI.&mdash;</b>Englishman, independent means, aged 52, married.
+ His ancestry is of a complicated character. Some of his mother's
+ forefathers in the last and earlier centuries are supposed to
+ have been inverted. He remembers liking the caresses of his
+ father's footmen when he was quite a little boy. He dreams
+ indifferently about men and women, and has strong sexual feeling
+ for women. Can copulate, but does not insist on this act; there
+ is a tendency to refined, voluptuous <a name='2_Page_183'></a>pleasure. He has been
+ married for many years, and there are several children by the
+ marriage.</p>
+
+<p> He is not particular about the class or age of the men he loves.
+ He feels with regard to older men as a women does, and likes to
+ be caressed by them. He is immensely vain of his physical beauty;
+ he shuns <i>pedicatio</i> and does not much care for the sexual act,
+ but likes long hours of voluptuous communion during which his
+ lover admires him. He feels the beauty of boyhood. At the same
+ time he is much attracted by young girls.</p>
+
+<p> He is decidedly feminine in his dress, manner of walking, love of
+ scents, ornaments, and fine things. His body is excessively
+ smooth and white, the hips and buttocks rounded. Genital organs
+ normal. His temperament is feminine, especially in vanity,
+ irritability, and petty preoccupations. He is much preoccupied
+ with his personal appearance and fond of admiration; on one
+ occasion he was photographed naked as Bacchus. He is physically
+ and morally courageous. He has a genius for poetry and
+ speculation, with a tendency to mysticism.</p>
+
+<p> He feels the discord between his love for men and society, also
+ between it and his love for his wife. He regards it as, in part,
+ at least, hereditary and inborn in him.</p>
+
+
+<p> <b>HISTORY XXXII.&mdash;</b>C. R., physician; age 38. Nationality, Irish, with
+ a Portuguese strain. &quot;My mother came of an old Quaker family. I
+ was quite unaware of sexual differences until I was about 14, as
+ I was carefully kept separate from my sisters and, although from
+ time to time strange longings which I did not understand
+ possessed me, I was a virgin in thought and deed until that
+ period of life.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;When I was 14 a cousin some years older than myself came to stay
+ with us and shared my bed. To my surprise he took hold of my
+ penis and rubbed it for a time, when a most pleasant feeling
+ seized me and increased until a discharge came out of my organ;
+ he then asked me to do the same to him. We frequently repeated
+ the process during the following month; I was quite unaware of
+ any harm resulting.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;The same year I went to school, but none of my schoolmates for
+ some time even suggested such actions until a friend staying with
+ us for the holidays one day in the bathroom repeated the process
+ and pressed his penis between my thighs, when a similar discharge
+ took place. I shortly found out that several of my school friends
+ and male cousins had the same desires, and an elder brother of my
+ first introducer into sexuality repeatedly spent the night with
+ me, when we would amuse ourselves in a similar way.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;A little later, my mother being away from home, I shared my
+ father's bed and he took my penis in his hand and pulled my
+ foreskin back. I in return took hold of his and found that he had
+ an erection.<a name='2_Page_184'></a> I proceeded to rub him when he stopped me and told
+ me that I should not do so, that when I was a little older I
+ should love a woman to do it and that if I did not rub myself and
+ allow other boys to do so, I would enjoy myself much more. I am
+ quite certain that my father was inverted, as he frequently, if
+ sleeping with me, used to press my naked body against his and he
+ always had a strong erection. On one occasion he rubbed me until
+ I had a discharge and then, turning over on his back, made me
+ take his penis in my hand and rub him for a few minutes. I used
+ to jest frequently with my father, as from my seventeenth year my
+ penis was larger than his. I will return to my father a little
+ later. When I was 17 a college friend shared my bed, and when
+ undressing he said that he envied me my penis being so much
+ larger than his; after getting into bed, he asked me to turn on
+ my side and I found that he was attempting <i>pedicatio</i>. I was
+ astonished at his doing so when he informed me that next to a
+ woman this process gave most pleasure. However, nothing resulted
+ and this is the only experience of <i>pedicatio</i> that I have ever
+ had.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;When I was 18 one evening a college chum introduced me to a
+ woman and she was the first I ever had connection with. We went
+ behind some rocks and she took hold of my penis and pressed it
+ into her body, lying against me.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;My father evidently suspected me when I came home, and a few
+ days afterward told me that it was very dangerous to have
+ anything to do with women, that I should wait until I was older,
+ that when a boy became a man he ought to have a woman
+ occasionally, and that if I ever had a nasty disease I should
+ promptly tell him so that I could be properly cured.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;At college I found several chums who were fond of sharing my bed
+ and indulging in mutual masturbation, pressing our bodies
+ together face to face until there was mutual discharge, but never
+ again anyone who tried anal connection.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;A short time afterward I was in Brussels and I paid my first
+ visit to a brothel, a place close to the Cathedral. I picked a
+ girl of about 18 from eight naked beauties paraded for my choice.
+ She was avaricious and demanded 10 francs, I had paid 20 for my
+ room and had only 2 left. I wanted her to play with me, but she
+ only seized the penis and pulled me to her with such vigorous
+ action that I discharged very rapidly. I was so disgusted with
+ the result that I masturbated when I returned to my boarding
+ house.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;A year later I paid Portugal a visit and my friends there
+ frequently brought me to brothels and also introduced me to
+ ladies of easy virtue. I had connection with them; the Portuguese
+ prostitutes never suggested anything unnatural and in no instance
+ did a male approach me for sexual purposes.</p><a name='2_Page_185'></a>
+
+<p> &quot;When I became a medical student, I used to visit a Turkish bath
+ frequently; on one occasion I playfully slapped a friend on the
+ buttocks, when my father, who was present, told me not to do so
+ as it was not proper conduct in public, that if I liked to do so
+ to him or one or two others it was no harm in private. Until I
+ was 21, in the bath my father always covered his penis from my
+ view, but after I attained my majority he always exposed himself
+ and repeatedly showed me pictures of naked women; he also taught
+ me the use of the condom.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;In my twenty-fourth year, a tall, handsome man who used to
+ frequent the baths one day sat down beside me and playfully
+ knocked my toes with his; he then pressed his naked thigh against
+ mine and a little later in the cooling room slipped his hand
+ under my sheet and grasped my penis; he then asked me to meet him
+ a few days later in the baths, saying I would be pleased with
+ what he would do.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I kept the appointment and he took me into the hottest room,
+ where we lay on the floor; in a few minutes he turned on his side
+ and threw one of his legs across me; I got frightened and jumped
+ up; he had a powerful erection, but I refused to lie down again,
+ although he pulled his foreskin back to excite my desires; I was
+ afraid of being surprised by another bather. Twice on future
+ occasions I met this man and he made advances. I believe that I
+ would have yielded then if we had met at a private house.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;Shortly afterward I met an elderly gentleman at the baths who
+ also made advances to me, but from fear I resisted him. I also
+ disliked him as he had a foul breath and bad teeth; besides I was
+ now able to go to the Continent and enjoy female charms to my
+ heart's desire.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;After qualification I joined the army in South Africa and to my
+ astonishment found many of my comrades fond of male society; one
+ officer who had been wounded shared my bedroom at a military
+ hospital and when undressing frequently admired my penis; we used
+ to play with each other until we had powerful erections, but we
+ never masturbated or tried any unnatural vice.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I used to have connection with women as frequently as I could,
+ and I frequently visited the Turkish baths and found that several
+ clients were abnormal, including one of the masseurs; the latter
+ enjoyed playing with my penis, kissing and tickling me.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I married at 28. My married life has been normal and my wife and
+ I are still in love with one another; we have had several
+ children.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;My last sexual experiences have been in Australia; once in
+ Sydney at the baths a fellow-bather playfully began tickling me,
+ when I had an erection; he grasped my penis, I jumped up, and he
+ asked me <a name='2_Page_186'></a>to do anything that I liked with him. I refused. Once
+ on board a coasting steamer a fellow-passenger used to expose
+ himself, posing as a statue; we became very familiar and he
+ wanted me to spend a night with him. I also refused his offers.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I am very healthy and strong, fond of riding, fishing, and
+ shooting. I lead a very active life. I am neither musician nor
+ artist, but fond of hearing music and I admire works of art.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;In person I am 6 feet high, inclined to fat; my body is very
+ strong; my penis is six inches long in repose and eight in
+ erection; I can without fatigue discharge twice in the night and
+ have connection at least twice a week. My scrotum is tense and
+ both testicles large. I am rather slow at discharging. I have
+ never had any desire to have connection with any other woman
+ since marriage, but several times I have met men who attracted
+ me. I have a friend (another doctor) who is very familiar with me
+ and if we spend a night together we will play with each other. I
+ have a great desire for him to circumcize me. We have never
+ indulged in anything beyond feeling or pressing our bodies
+ together like schoolboys.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;My favorite color is green.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;My erotic dreams, when I have any, are of my wife or of a male
+ lover.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;Sexual inversion is more widespread than is popularly supposed
+ and I have never had any twinge of conscience after any of my
+ affairs. I regard the homosexual instinct as quite natural, and,
+ except in regard to my wife, it is stronger in my case than the
+ heterosexual instinct. I have never initiated a youth into the
+ sexual life or had any desire to seduce a girl. Boys under 17, or
+ persons of lower social class, have no attraction for me.&quot;</p>
+
+
+<p> <b>HISTORY XXXIII.&mdash;</b>M. O., 30 years of age, born in the United
+ States, of English father and of mother whose father was
+ Scotch,&mdash;the rest of his ancestry being English of long standing
+ in America, with a very little admixture of Dutch blood. He is 5
+ feet 8 inches in height, and has brown hair and eyes. No
+ hereditary troubles so far as known. In childhood, for some time
+ &quot;threatened with chorea.&quot; Is subject to tonsillitis and a
+ stubborn though not severe form of indigestion, induced by
+ sedentary habits. He is of quick, nervous temperament. Has an
+ aversion from most outdoor sports, but a great esthetic
+ attraction to nature. Highly educated.</p>
+
+<p> As far back as he can remember, he lived in a house from which
+ his parents removed when he was 4 years old. Before this removal,
+ he remembers two distinctly sexual experiences. A cousin five
+ years older was in the bathroom, seated, and M. O. was feeling his
+ sexual organs; his mother called him out. On another occasion he
+ was in <a name='2_Page_187'></a>a wagonhouse with a girl of his own age. They were lying
+ on a carriage-seat attempting intercourse. The girl's older
+ sister came in and found them. She said: &quot;I am going to tell
+ mamma; you know she said for you not to do that any more.&quot; With
+ each of these clear memories comes the strong impression that it
+ was but one among many. Five years ago M. O. met a man of his own
+ age who had lived in that neighborhood at the same time.
+ Comparing notes, they found that nearly all the small children in
+ it had been given to such practices. The neighborhood was a
+ thoroughly &quot;respectable&quot; middle-class one.</p>
+
+<p> From it, M. O. removed to another of just about the same
+ character, and lived there until he was 11 years old. Of this
+ period his memories are very fresh and abundant. With a single
+ exception, all the children between 5 and 14 years of age appear
+ to have indulged freely in promiscuous sexual play. In little
+ companies of from four to twelve they went where trees or long
+ grass hid them from observation, and exhibited their persons to
+ one another; sometimes, also, they handled one another, but not
+ in the way of masturbation. Of this last, M. O. was wholly
+ ignorant. Sometimes when but two or three were together,
+ intercourse was attempted. In M. O.'s case there was eager sexual
+ curiosity, and a more or less keen desire, but actual contact
+ brought no great satisfaction. On two or three occasions girls
+ practised <i>fellatio</i>, and he then reciprocated with
+ <i>cunnilinctus</i>, but without pleasure. In all these plays he is
+ sure that girls took the initiative as often as boys did.</p>
+
+<p> During all this period, M. O. had now one girl sweetheart and now
+ another. This was conventional among the children, and was
+ fostered by the banter of older persons. M. O.'s sexual curiosity
+ was certainly greater in regard to the opposite sex. At this
+ time, however, his homosexual interests appeared. With a boy two
+ or more years older he frequently went to some hiding-place where
+ they looked at each other's organs and handled them. He and
+ another boy were once in an abandoned garden, and they took off
+ all their clothes, the better to examine each other. The other
+ boy then offered to kiss M. O.'s fundament, and did so. It caused
+ a surprisingly keen and distinctly sexual sensation, the first
+ sexual shock that he can remember experiencing. He refused to
+ reciprocate, however, when asked.</p>
+
+<p> Toward the end of this period there was a new and increasing
+ development of another sort, not recognized then as at all sexual
+ in character. He began to feel toward certain boys in a way very
+ different and much keener than he had done thus far toward girls,
+ although at the time he made no comparisons. For instance there
+ was a boy whom he considered very pretty. They visited each other
+ often and <a name='2_Page_188'></a>spent long times playing together. In school they
+ looked and looked at each other until delicious, uncontrollable
+ giggling spells came on. Sexual matters were never discussed or
+ thought of. These experiences were, in their way, very
+ sentimental and ideal. M. O. is sure that with himself the main
+ consideration was always the other boy's beauty. He began to
+ recall with great fondness a certain much older and very handsome
+ youth who had lived near him in the first neighborhood, and had
+ at the time shown him, various little friendly attentions. He
+ seldom saw him now, and hardly sought to do so, yet was immensely
+ pleased by a casual word or look from him in the schoolyard, and
+ much interested when other people spoke of him.</p>
+
+<p> A cousin about two years younger than M. O. often visited him and
+ slept with him. They were very fond of each other, and handled
+ each other's organs.</p>
+
+<p> When M. O. was about 11 years of age the family removed to a
+ distant neighborhood, where there were almost no children of his
+ own age, and where any association with those in the one just
+ left was practically impossible. From this time until the changes
+ of puberty were well under way his sexual life contrasted
+ strongly, in its solitude, with the former promiscuity. He
+ remembers liking to wrestle with two or three schoolboys and to
+ get their heads between his legs. He thinks they were not aware
+ of his sexual impulses. He flirted, consciously flirted, with
+ certain school-girls, but never even suggested anything sexual to
+ them. He read a few family medical books.</p>
+
+<p> One day, lying on an old uneven couch, innocently enough at
+ first, he induced a new and delicious sensation, altogether
+ different from any he had ever dreamed of&mdash;something far beyond
+ the satisfaction of mere curiosity. He repeated the thing and
+ before long produced emissions. Masturbation soon followed.
+ Certain days he would perform the act two or three times, but
+ again he would avoid it for days. He began at once to fight the
+ tendency, and felt very guilty and very ashamed for indulging it.
+ He prayed for help and at times wept over his failures to break
+ the habit so quickly formed. For a certain period, after two or
+ three years, he seemed to have succeeded, but he observed that he
+ had intense erotic dreams with copious emissions regularly every
+ eight days. Just then certain newspaper advertisements fell under
+ his eye, and these persuaded him that he had produced in himself
+ a diseased condition. He never resorted to the remedies
+ advertised, but he was discouraged in his efforts to overcome the
+ bad habit; and since the evil effects appeared to consist only in
+ the seminal losses, he concluded that he might as well have the
+ greater enjoyment of masturbation.</p>
+
+<p> For a short time, he remembers that he had an intense but
+ <a name='2_Page_189'></a>revolting interest in the sexual organs of animals, especially
+ horses. The males were much more interesting.</p>
+
+<p> Gradually he began to develop, entirely from within, the ideal of
+ a male comrade,&mdash;a beautiful, emotional boy between whom and
+ himself there might exist a powerful romantic passion. He lay for
+ hours dreaming of this, and inventing thrilling situations.
+ Suddenly, at church, he became acquainted with the very youth,
+ Edmund, who seemed to satisfy all his longings. M. O. was then 16&frac12;
+ and Edmund 15. A real wooing ensued, Edmund finally yielding to
+ the physical appeals of M. O. after several fits of misgiving. The
+ yielding was in the end complete, however. The two spent night
+ after night together, enjoying intercrural intercourse and
+ sometimes mutual masturbation. Their parents may have been
+ slightly uneasy at times, but the connection continued
+ uninterruptedly for a year and a half or more. In the meantime
+ M. O. occasionally had relations with other boys, but never
+ wavered in his real preference for Edmund. For girls he had no
+ sexual desire whatever, though he was much associated with them.</p>
+
+<p> Then M. O. and Edmund went to college at different places, but
+ they met in vacations and wrote frequent and ardent love-letters.
+ Both had genuine attacks of love-sickness and of jealousy. As
+ M. O. looks back on this first love passion he can by no means
+ regret it. It doubtless had great formative influence.</p>
+
+<p> After the first year at college, Edmund transferred to another
+ school farther away from M. O. and the opportunities for meeting
+ became rarer, but their affection was maintained and the
+ intercourse resumed whenever it was possible. Gradually, however,
+ Edmund became interested in women and finally married. M. O. also
+ formed relations repeatedly with college friends and occasionally
+ with others.</p>
+
+<p> On the whole M. O. preferred boys a year or two younger than
+ himself, but as he grew older the age difference increased. At 30
+ he regarded himself as virtually &quot;engaged&quot; to a youth of 17, one
+ unusually mature, however, and much larger than himself.</p>
+
+<p> M. O. is always unhappy unless his affections have fairly free
+ course. Life has been very disappointing to him in other
+ respects. His greatest joys have come to him in this way. If he
+ is able to consummate his present plan of union with the youth
+ just referred to, he will feel that his life has been crowned by
+ what is for him the best possible end; otherwise, he declares, he
+ would not care to live at all.</p>
+
+<p> He admires male beauty passionately. Feminine beauty he perceives
+ objectively, as he would any design of flowing curves and
+ delicate coloring, but it has no sexual charm for him whatever.
+ Women have put themselves in his way repeatedly, but he finds
+ himself more <a name='2_Page_190'></a>and more irritated by their specifically feminine
+ foibles. With men generally he is much more patient and
+ sympathetic.</p>
+
+<p> The first literature that appealed to him was Plato's dialogues,
+ first read at 20 years of age. Until then he had not known but
+ what he stood alone in his peculiarity. He read what he could of
+ classic literature. He enjoys Pater, appreciating his attitude
+ toward his own sex. Four or five years, later he came across
+ Raffalovich's book, and ever since has felt a real debt of
+ gratitude to its author.</p>
+
+<p> M. O. has no wish to injure society at large. As an individual he
+ holds that he has the same right to be himself that anyone else
+ has. He thinks that while boys of from 13 to 15 might possibly be
+ rendered inverts, those who reach 16 without it cannot be bent
+ that way. They may be devoted to an invert enough in other ways
+ to yield him what he wishes sexually, but they will remain
+ essentially normal themselves. His observations are based on
+ about 30 homosexual relationships that have lasted various
+ lengths of time.</p>
+
+<p> M. O. feels strongly the poetic and elevated character of his
+ principal homosexual relationships, but he shrinks from appearing
+ too sentimental.</p>
+
+<p> With regard to the traces of feminism in inverts he writes:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p> &quot;Up to the age of 11 I associated much with a cousin five years
+ older (the one referred to above) and took great delight in a
+ game we often played, in which I was a girl,&mdash;a never-ending
+ romance, a non-sexual love story.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;Somewhat later and until puberty, I took great delight in
+ acting, but generally took female roles, wearing skirts, shawls,
+ beads, wigs, head-dresses. When I was about 13 my family began to
+ make fun of me for it. I played secretly for a while, and then
+ the desire for it left, never to return.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;There still lingers, however, a minor interest, which began
+ before puberty, in valentines. My feeling for them is much like
+ my feeling for flowers.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;Before I reached puberty I was sometimes called a 'sissy' by my
+ father. Such taunts humiliated me more than anything else has
+ ever done. After puberty my father no longer applied the term,
+ and gradually other persons ceased to tease me that way. The
+ sting of it lasted, though, and led me more than once to ask
+ intimate friends, both men and women, if they considered me at
+ all feminine. Every one of them has been very emphatically of the
+ opinion that my rational life is distinctively masculine, being
+ logical, impartial, skeptical. One or two have suggested that I
+ have a finer discrimination than most men, and that I take care
+ of my rooms somewhat as a woman might, though this does not
+ extend to the style of decorations. One man said that I <a name='2_Page_191'></a>lacked
+ sympathy with certain 'grosser manifestations of masculine
+ character, such as smoking.' Some women think me unusually
+ observing of women's dress. My own is by no means effeminate. In
+ a muscular way I have average strength, but am supple far beyond
+ what is usual. If trained for it early, I believe I would have
+ made a good contortionist.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I have never had the least inclination to use tobacco, generally
+ take neither tea nor coffee, and seldom any liquor, never malt
+ liquors. The dessert is always the best part of the meal. These
+ tastes I attribute largely to my sedentary life. When out camping
+ I observed a marked change in the direction of heartier food and
+ mild stimulants.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;My physical courage has never been put to the test, but I
+ observe that others appear to count on it. I am very aggressive
+ in matters of religious, political, social opinion. In moral
+ courage I am either reckless or courageous, I do not know which.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I am, perhaps, a better whistler than most men.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;When I was quite little my grandmother taught me to do certain
+ kinds of fancy-work, and I continued to do a little from time to
+ time until I was 24. Then I became irritated over a piece that
+ troubled me, put it in the fire, and have not wanted to touch any
+ since. As a pet economy I continue to do nearly all of my own
+ mending.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I have a decided aversion for much jewelry. My estheticism is
+ very pronounced as compared with most of the men with whom I
+ associate, although I have never been able to give it much scope.
+ It makes for cleanliness, order, and general good taste. My dress
+ is economical and by no means fastidious; yet it seems to be
+ generally approved. I have been complimented often on my ability
+ to select appropriate presents, clothing, and to arrange a room.&quot;</p>
+
+<p> M. O. states that he practises the love-bite at times, though very
+ gently. He often wants to pinch one who interests him sexually.</p>
+
+<p> He considers very silly the statement somewhere made, that
+ inverts are always liars. Very few people, he says, are perfectly
+ honest, and the more dangerous society makes it for a man to be
+ so, the less likely he is to be. While he himself has been unable
+ in two or three instances to keep promises made to withhold from
+ sexual intercourse with certain attractive individuals, he has
+ never otherwise been guilty of untruth about his homosexual
+ relations.</p>
+
+<p> The foregoing narrative was received eight years ago. During this
+ interval M. O.'s health has very greatly improved. There has been
+ a marked increase in outdoor activities and interests.</p>
+
+<p> Two years since M. O. consulted a prominent specialist who
+ performed <a name='2_Page_192'></a>a thorough psychoanalysis. He informed M. O. that he
+ was less strongly homosexual than he himself supposed, and
+ recommended marriage with some young and pretty woman. He
+ attributed the homosexual bent to M. O.'s having had his &quot;nose
+ broken&quot; at the age of 6, by the birth of a younger brother, who
+ from that time on received all the attention and petting. M. O.
+ had continued up to that age very affectionate toward his mother
+ and dependent on her. He can remember friends and neighbors
+ commenting on it. At first M. O. was inclined to reject this
+ suggestion of the specialist, but on long reflection he inclines
+ to believe that it was indeed a very important factor, though not
+ the sole one. From his later observations of children and
+ comparisons of these with memories of his own childhood, M. O.
+ says he is sure he was affectionate and demonstrative much beyond
+ the average. His greatest craving was for affection, and his
+ greatest grief the fancied belief that no one cared for him. At
+ 10 or 11 he attempted suicide for this reason.</p>
+
+<p> Also as a result of the psychoanalysis, but trying to eliminate
+ the influence of suggestion, he recollects and emphasizes more
+ the attraction he felt toward girls before the age of 12. Had his
+ sexual experiences subsequently proved normal, he doubts if those
+ before 12 could be held to give evidence of homosexuality, but
+ only of precocious nervous and sexual irritability, greatly
+ heightened and directed by the secret practices of the children
+ with whom he associated. He does not see why these experiences
+ should have given him a homosexual bent any more than a
+ heterosexual one.</p>
+
+<p> The psychoanalysis recalled to M. O. that during the period of
+ early flirtation he had often kissed and embraced various girls,
+ but likewise he recalled having observed at the same time, with
+ some surprise, that no definitely sexual desire arose, though the
+ way was probably open to gratify it. Such interest as did exist
+ ceased wholly or almost so as the relation with Edmund developed.
+ There was no aversion from the company of girls and women,
+ however; the intellectual friendships were mainly with them,
+ while the emotional ones were with boys.</p>
+
+<p> Very recently M. O. spent several days with Edmund, who has been
+ married for several years. With absolutely no sexual interest in
+ each other, they nevertheless found a great bond of love still
+ subsisting. Neither regrets anything of the past, but feels that
+ the final outcome of their earlier relation has been good.
+ Edmund's beauty is still pronounced, and is remarked by others.</p>
+
+<p> In spite of his precocious sexuality, M. O. had from the very
+ first an extreme disgust for obscene stories, and for any
+ association of sexual things with filthy words and anecdotes.
+ Owing in part to this <a name='2_Page_193'></a>and in part to his temperamental
+ skepticism, he disbelieved what associates told him regarding
+ sexual emissions, only becoming convinced when he actually
+ experienced them; and the facts of reproduction he denied
+ indignantly until he read them in a medical work. Until he was
+ well over 25 the physical aversion from any thought of
+ reproduction was intense. He knows other, normal, young men who
+ have felt the same way, but he believes it would be prevented or
+ overcome by sex-education such as is now being introduced in
+ American schools.</p>
+
+<p> Again, as to traces of feminism: Perhaps two years ago, all
+ impulse to give the love-bite disappeared suddenly. There has
+ been lately a marked increase of dramatic interest, arising in
+ perfectly natural ways, and without any of the peculiarities
+ noted before. The childish pleasure in valentines has all gone;
+ M. O. believes that <i>circumstances</i> have lately been more
+ favorable for the development of a more robust estheticism.</p>
+
+<p> For some years he has heard no definite reproach for feminism,
+ though some persons tell his friends that he is &quot;very peculiar.&quot;
+ He forms many intimate, enduring, non-sexual friendships with
+ both men and women, and he doubts if the peculiarity noted by
+ others is due so much to his homosexuality as it is to his
+ estheticism, skepticism, and the unconventional opinions which he
+ expresses quite indiscreetly at times. With the improvement in
+ general health, has come the changes that would be expected in
+ food and other matters of daily life.</p>
+
+<p> Resuming his narrative at the point where the earlier
+ communication left it, M. O. says that about a year after that
+ time, the youth of 17 to whom he had considered himself virtually
+ engaged withdrew from the agreement so far as it bore on his own
+ future, but not from the sentimental relation as it existed.
+ Although separated most of the time by distance, the physical
+ relation was resumed whenever they met. Subsequently, however,
+ the young man fell in love with a young woman and became engaged
+ to her. His physical relation with M. O. then ceased, but the
+ friendship otherwise continues strong.</p>
+
+<p> Shortly after the first break in this relation, M. O. became,
+ through the force of quite unusual circumstances, very friendly
+ and intimate with a young woman of considerable charm. He
+ confided to her his abnormality, and was not repulsed. To others
+ their relation probably appeared that of lovers, and a painful
+ situation was created by the slander of a jealous woman. M. O.
+ felt that in honor he must propose marriage to her. The young
+ woman was non-committal, but invited M. O. to spend several months
+ at her home. Shortly after his arrival a sad occurrence in his
+ own family compelled him to go away, and they did not meet again
+ for four years. They corresponded, but less and less often. His
+ relations with boys continued.</p><a name='2_Page_194'></a>
+
+<p> Before his final meeting with her he became acquainted with a
+ woman whom he has since married. The acquaintance began in a
+ wholly non-sentimental community of interests in certain
+ practical affairs, and very gradually widened into an
+ intellectual and sympathetic friendship. M. O. had no secrets from
+ this woman. After a full and prolonged consideration of all sides
+ of the matter they married. Since that event he has had no sexual
+ relations except with his wife. With her they are not passionate,
+ but they are animated by the strong desire for children. Of the
+ parental instinct he had become aware several years before this.</p>
+
+<p> M. O. believes that no moral stigma should be attached to
+ homosexuality until it can be proved to result from the vicious
+ life of a free moral agent,&mdash;and of this he has no expectation.
+ He believes that much of its danger and unhappiness would be
+ prevented by a thorough yet discreet sex-education, such as
+ should be given to all children, whether normal or abnormal. </p></div>
+
+<hr />
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_124'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_124'>[124]</a> Thus Godard described the little boys in Cairo as amusing
+themselves indifferently either with boys or girls in sexual play.
+(<i>Egypte et Palestine</i>, 1867, p. 105.) The same thing may be observed in
+England and elsewhere.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_125'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_125'>[125]</a> Thus, of the Duc d'Orleans, in the seventeenth century, as
+described in Bouchard's <i>Confessions</i>, one of my correspondents writes:
+&quot;This prince was of the same mind as Campanella, who, in the <i>Citt&agrave; del
+Sole</i>, laid it down that young men ought to be freely admitted to women
+for the avoidance of sexual aberrations. Aretino and Berni enable us to
+comprehend the sexual immorality of males congregated together in the
+courts of Roman prelates.&quot; The homosexuality of youth was also well
+recognized among the Romans, but they adopted the contrary course and
+provided means to gratify it, as the existence of the <i>concubinus</i>,
+referred to by Catullus, clearly shows.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_126'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_126'>[126]</a> &quot;Our Public Schools: their Methods and Morals.&quot; <i>New
+Review</i>, July, 1893.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_127'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_127'>[127]</a> Max Dessoir, &quot;Z&uuml;r Psychologie der Vita Sexualis,&quot;
+<i>Allgemeine Zeitschrift f&uuml;r Psychiatrie</i>, 1894, H. 5.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_128'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_128'>[128]</a> F. H. A. Marshall, <i>The Physiology of Reproduction</i>, 1910,
+pp. 650-8.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_129'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_129'>[129]</a> Iwan Bloch, in <i>The Sexual Life of Our Time</i>, makes this
+distinction as between &quot;homosexuality&quot; (corresponding to inversion) and
+&quot;pseudo-homosexuality.&quot; According to the terminology I have accepted, the
+term &quot;pseudo-homosexuality&quot; would be unnecessary and incorrect. More
+recently (<i>Die Prostitution</i>, Bd. i, 1912, p. 103) Bloch has preferred, in
+place of pseudo-homosexuality, the more satisfactory term, &quot;secondary
+homosexuality.&quot;</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_130'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_130'>[130]</a> See, for instance, Hirschfeld's reasonable discussion of
+the matter, <i>Die Homosexualit&auml;t</i>, ch. xvii.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_131'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_131'>[131]</a> Alfred Fuchs, who edited Krafft-Ebing's <i>Psychopathia
+Sexualis</i> after the latter's death, distinguishes between congenital
+homosexuality, manifesting itself from the first without external
+stimulation, and homosexuality on a basis of inborn disposition needing
+special external influences to arouse it (<i>Jahrbuch f&uuml;r sexuelle
+Zwischenstufen</i>, Bd. iv, 1902, p. 181).</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_132'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_132'>[132]</a> Krafft-Ebing, &quot;Ueber tardive Homosexualit&auml;t,&quot; <i>Jahrbuch f&uuml;r
+sexuelle Zwischenstufen</i>, Bd. iii, 1901, p. 7; N&auml;cke, &quot;Probleme auf den
+Gebiete der Homosexualit&auml;t,&quot; <i>Allgemeine Zeitschrift f&uuml;r Psychiatrie</i>,
+1902, p. 805; <i>ib.</i>, &quot;Ueber tardive Homosexualit&auml;t,&quot; <i>Sexual-Probleme</i>,
+September, 1911. Numa Praetorius (<i>Jahrbuch f&uuml;r sexuelle Zwischenstufen</i>,
+January, 1913, p. 228) considers that retarded cases should not be
+regarded as bisexual, but as genuine inverts who had acquired a
+pseudoheterosexuality which at last falls away; at the most, he believes
+such cases merely represent a prolongation of the youthful
+undifferentiated period.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_133'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_133'>[133]</a> Moll, <i>Untersuchungen &uuml;ber die Libido Sexualis</i>, 1897, pp,
+458-8.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_134'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_134'>[134]</a> Hirschfeld, <i>Die Homosexualit&auml;t</i>, ch. viii.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_135'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_135'>[135]</a> This was the term used in the earlier editions of the
+present <i>Study</i>. I willingly reject it in favor of the simpler and fairly
+clear term now more generally employed. It is true that by bisexuality it
+is possible to understand not only the double direction of the sexual
+instinct, but also the presence of both sexes in the same individual,
+which in French is more accurately distinguished as &quot;bisexuation.&quot;</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_136'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_136'>[136]</a> J. Van Biervliet, &quot;L'Homme Droit et l'Homme Gauche,&quot; <i>Revue
+Philosophique</i>, October, 1901. It is here shown that in the constitution
+of their nervous system the ambidextrous are demonstrably left-sided
+persons; their optic, acoustic, olfactory, and muscular sensitivity is
+preponderant on the left side.</p></div>
+
+
+
+<hr class="full" />
+<h3><a name='2_CHAPTER_IV'></a><a name='2_Page_195'></a>CHAPTER IV.&mdash;SEXUAL INVERSION IN WOMEN.</h3>
+
+<div class='blkquot'><p>Prevalence of Sexual Inversion Among Women&mdash;Among Women of Ability&mdash;Among
+the Lower Races&mdash;Temporary Homosexuality in Schools,
+etc.&mdash;Histories&mdash;Physical and Psychic Characteristics of Inverted
+Women&mdash;The Modern Development of Homosexuality Among Women.</p></div>
+
+<p>Homosexuality is not less common in women than in men. In the seriocomic
+theory of sex set forth by Aristophanes in Plato's <i>Symposium</i>, males and
+females are placed on a footing of complete equality, and, however
+fantastic, the theory suffices to indicate that to the Greek mind, so
+familiar with homosexuality, its manifestations seemed just as likely to
+occur in women as in men. That is undoubtedly the case. Like other
+anomalies, indeed, in its more pronounced forms it may be less frequently
+met with in women; in its less pronounced forms, almost certainly, it is
+more frequently found. A Catholic confessor, a friend tells me, informed
+him that for one man who acknowledges homosexual practices there are three
+women. For the most part feminine homosexuality runs everywhere a parallel
+course to masculine homosexuality and is found under the same conditions.
+It is as common in girls as in boys; it has been found, under certain
+conditions, to abound among women in colleges and convents and prisons, as
+well as under the ordinary conditions of society. Perhaps the earliest
+case of homosexuality recorded in detail occurred in a woman,<a name='2_FNanchor_137'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_137'><sup>[137]</sup></a> and it
+was with the <a name='2_Page_196'></a>investigation of such a case in a woman that Westphal may be
+said to have inaugurated the scientific study of inversion.</p>
+
+<p>Moreover, inversion is as likely to be accompanied by high intellectual
+ability in a woman as in a man. The importance of a clear conception of
+inversion is indeed in some respects, under present social conditions,
+really even greater in the case of women than of men. For if, as has
+sometimes been said of our civilization, &quot;this is a man's world,&quot; the
+large proportion of able women inverts, whose masculine qualities render
+it comparatively easy for them to adopt masculine avocations, becomes a
+highly significant fact.<a name='2_FNanchor_138'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_138'><sup>[138]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>It has been noted of distinguished women in all ages and in all fields of
+activity that they have frequently displayed some masculine traits.<a name='2_FNanchor_139'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_139'><sup>[139]</sup></a>
+Even &quot;the first great woman in history,&quot; as she has been called by a
+historian of Egypt, Queen Hatschepsu, was clearly of markedly virile
+temperament, and always had herself represented on her monuments in
+masculine costume, and even with a false beard.<a name='2_FNanchor_140'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_140'><sup>[140]</sup></a> Other famous queens
+have on more or less satisfactory grounds been suspected of a homosexual
+temperament, such as Catherine II of Russia, who appears to have been
+bisexual, and Queen Christina of Sweden, whose very marked masculine
+traits and high intelligence seem to have been combined with a definitely
+homosexual or bisexual temperament.<a name='2_FNanchor_141'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_141'><sup>[141]</sup></a> <a name='2_Page_197'></a></p>
+
+<p>Great religious and moral leaders, like Madame Blavatsky and Louise
+Michel, have been either homosexual or bisexual or, at least, of
+pronounced masculine temperament.<a name='2_FNanchor_142'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_142'><sup>[142]</sup></a> Great actresses from the eighteenth
+century onward have frequently been more or less correctly identified with
+homosexuality, as also many women distinguished in other arts.<a name='2_FNanchor_143'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_143'><sup>[143]</sup></a> Above
+all, Sappho, the greatest of women poets, the peer of the greatest poets
+of the other sex in the supreme power of uniting art and passion, has left
+a name which is permanently associated with homosexuality.</p>
+
+<div class='blkquot'><p>It can scarcely be said that opinion is unanimous in regard to
+ Sappho, and the reliable information about her, outside the
+ evidence of the fragments of her poems which have reached us, is
+ scanty. Her fame has always been great; in classic times her name
+ was coupled with Homer's. But even to antiquity she was somewhat
+ of an enigma, and many legends grew up around her name, such as
+ the familiar story that she threw herself into the sea for the
+ love of Phaon. What remains clear is that she was regarded with
+ great respect and admiration by her contemporaries, that she was
+ of aristocratic family, that she was probably married and had a
+ daughter, that at one time she had to take her part in political
+ exile, and that she addressed her girl friends in precisely
+ similar terms to those addressed by Alcaeus to youths. We know
+ that in antiquity feminine homosexuality was regarded as
+ especially common in Sparta, Lesbos, and Miletus. Horace, who was
+ able to read Sappho's complete poems, states that the objects of
+ her love-plaints were the young girls of Lesbos, while Ovid, who
+ played so considerable a part in weaving fantastic stories round
+ Sappho's name, never claimed that they had any basis of truth. It
+ was inevitable that the early Christians should eagerly attack so
+ ambiguous a figure, and Tatian (<i>Oratio ad Graecos</i>, cap. 52)
+ reproached the Greeks that they honored statues of the tribade
+ Sappho, a prostitute who had celebrated her own wantonness and
+ infatuation. The result is that in modern times there have been
+ some who placed Sappho's character in a very bad light and others
+ who have gone to the opposite extreme in an attempt at
+ &quot;rehabilitation.&quot; Thus, W. Mure, in his <i>History of the Language
+ and Literature of Ancient Greece</i> (1854, vol. iii, pp. 272-326,<a name='2_Page_198'></a>
+ 496-8), dealing very fully with Sappho, is disposed to accept
+ many of the worst stories about her, though he has no pronounced
+ animus, and, as regards female homosexuality, which he considers
+ to be &quot;far more venial&quot; than male homosexuality, he remarks that
+ &quot;in modern times it has numbered among its votaries females
+ distinguished for refinement of manners and elegant
+ accomplishments.&quot; Bascoul, on the other hand, will accept no
+ statements about Sappho which conflict with modern ideals of
+ complete respectability, and even seeks to rewrite her most
+ famous ode in accordance with the colorless literary sense which
+ he supposes that it originally bore (J. M. F. Bascoul, <i>La Chaste
+ Sappho et le Mouvement Feministe &agrave; Ath&egrave;nes</i>, 1911).
+ Wilamowitz-Moellendorff (<i>Sappho und Simonides</i>, 1913) also
+ represents the antiquated view, formerly championed by Welcker,
+ according to which the attribution of homosexuality is a charge
+ of &quot;vice,&quot; to be repudiated with indignation. Most competent and
+ reliable authorities today, however, while rejecting the
+ accretions of legend around Sappho's name and not disputing her
+ claim to respect, are not disposed to question the personal and
+ homosexual character of her poems. &quot;All ancient tradition and the
+ character of her extant fragments,&quot; says Prof. J. A. Platt
+ (<i>Encyclopedia Britannica</i>, 11th. ed., art. &quot;Sappho&quot;), &quot;show that
+ her morality was what has ever since been known as 'Lesbian.'&quot;
+ What exactly that &quot;Lesbian morality&quot; involved, we cannot indeed
+ exactly ascertain. &quot;It is altogether idle,&quot; as A. Croiset remarks
+ of Sappho (<i>Histoire de la Litt&eacute;rature Grecque</i>, vol. ii, ch. v),
+ &quot;to discuss the exact quality of this friendship or this love, or
+ to seek to determine with precision the frontiers, which language
+ itself often seems to seek to confuse, of a friendship more or
+ less esthetic and sensual, of a love more or less Platonic.&quot; (See
+ also J. M. Edmonds, <i>Sappho in the Added Light of the New
+ Fragments</i>, 1912). Iwan Bloch similarly concludes (<i>Ursprung der
+ Syphilis</i>, vol. ii, 1911, p. 507) that Sappho probably combined,
+ as modern investigation shows to be easily possible, lofty ideal
+ feelings with passionate sensuality, exactly as happens in normal
+ love. </p></div>
+
+<p>It must also be said that in literature homosexuality in women has
+furnished a much more frequent motive to the artist than homosexuality in
+men. Among the Greeks, indeed, homosexuality in women seldom receives
+literary consecration, and in the revival of the classical spirit at the
+Renaissance it was still chiefly in male adolescents, as we see, for
+instance, in Marino's <i>Adone</i>, that the homosexual ideal found expression.
+After that date male inversion was for a long period rarely touched in
+literature, save briefly and satirically, while inversion in women
+<a name='2_Page_199'></a>becomes a subject which might be treated in detail and even with
+complacence. Many poets and novelists, especially in France, might be
+cited in evidence.</p>
+
+<div class='blkquot'><p>Ariosto, it has been pointed out, has described the homosexual
+ attractions of women. Diderot's famous novel, <i>La Religieuse</i>,
+ which, when first published, was thought to have been actually
+ written by a nun, deals with the torture to which a nun was put
+ by the perverse lubricity of her abbess, for whom, it is said,
+ Diderot found a model in the Abbess of Chelles, a daughter of the
+ Regent and thus a member of a family which for several
+ generations showed a marked tendency to inversion. Diderot's
+ narrative has been described as a faithful description of the
+ homosexual phenomena liable to occur in convents. Feminine
+ homosexuality, especially in convents, was often touched on less
+ seriously in the eighteenth century. Thus we find a homosexual
+ scene in <i>Les Plaisirs du Clo&icirc;tre</i>, a play written in 1773 (<i>Le
+ Th&eacute;&acirc;tre d'Amour an XVIIIe Si&egrave;cle</i>, 1910.) Balzac, who treated so
+ many psychological aspects of love in a more or less veiled
+ manner, has touched on this in <i>La Fille aux Yeux d'Or</i>, in a
+ vague and extravagantly romantic fashion. Gautier made the
+ adventures of a woman who was predisposed to homosexuality, and
+ slowly realizes the fact, the central motive of his wonderful
+ romance, <i>Mademoiselle de Maupin</i> (1835). He approached the
+ subject purely as an artist and poet, but his handling of it
+ shows remarkable insight. Gautier based his romance to some
+ extent on the life of Madame Maupin or, as she preferred to call
+ herself, Mademoiselle Maupin, who was born in 1673 (her father's
+ name being d'Aubigny), dressed as a man, and became famous as a
+ teacher of fencing, afterward as an opera singer. She was
+ apparently of bisexual temperament, and her devotion to women led
+ her into various adventures. She ultimately entered a convent,
+ and died, at the age of 34, with a reputation for sanctity. (E. C.
+ Clayton, <i>Queens of Song</i>, vol. i, pp, 52-61; F. Karsch,
+ &quot;Mademoiselle Maupin,&quot; <i>Jahrbuch f&uuml;r sexuelle Zwischenstufen</i>,
+ vol. v, 1903, pp. 694-706.) A still greater writer, Flaubert, in
+ <i>Salammb&ocirc;</i> (1862) made his heroine homosexual. Zola has described
+ sexual inversion in <i>Nona</i> and elsewhere. Some thirty years ago a
+ popular novelist, A. Belot, published a novel called
+ <i>Mademoiselle Giraud, ma Femme</i>, which was much read; the
+ novelist took the attitude of a moralist who is bound to treat
+ frankly, but with all decorous propriety, a subject of increasing
+ social gravity. The story is that of a man whose bride will not
+ allow his approach on account of her own <i>liaison</i> with a female
+ friend continued after marriage. This book appears to have given
+ origin to a large number of novels, some of which touched the
+ question with considerable less affectation of propriety. Among
+ other novelists <a name='2_Page_200'></a>who have dealt with the matter may be mentioned
+ Guy de Maupassant (<i>La Femme de Paul</i>), Bourget (<i>Crime
+ d'Amour</i>), Catulle Mend&egrave;s (<i>M&eacute;phistoph&eacute;la</i>), and Willy in the
+ <i>Claudine</i> series.</p>
+
+<p> Among poets who have used the motive of homosexuality in women
+ with more or less boldness may be found Lamartine (<i>Regina</i>),
+ Swinburne (first series of <i>Poems and Ballads</i>), Verlaine
+ (<i>Parall&egrave;lement</i>), and Pierre Louys (<i>Chansons de Bilitis</i>). The
+ last-named book, a collection of homosexual prose-poems,
+ attracted considerable attention on publication, as it was an
+ attempt at mystification, being put forward as a translation of
+ the poems of a newly discovered Oriental Greek poetess; Bilitis
+ (more usually Beltis) is the Syrian name for Aphrodite. <i>Les
+ Chansons de Bilitis</i> are not without charm, but have been
+ severely dealt with by Wilamowitz-Moellendorff (<i>Sappho und
+ Simonides</i>, 1913, p. 63 <i>et seq.</i>) as &quot;a travesty of Hellenism,&quot;
+ betraying inadequate knowledge of Greek antiquity.</p>
+
+<p> More interesting, as the work of a woman who was not only highly
+ gifted, but herself of homosexual temperament, are the various
+ volumes of poems published by &quot;Ren&eacute;e Vivien.&quot; This lady, whose
+ real name was Pauline Tarn, was born in 1877; her father was of
+ Scotch descent, and her mother an American lady from Honolulu. As
+ a child she was taken to Paris, and was brought up as a French
+ girl. She travelled much and at one time took a house at
+ Mitylene, the chief city of ancient Lesbos. She had a love of
+ solitude, hated publicity, and was devoted to her women friends,
+ especially to one whose early death about 1900 was the great
+ sorrow of Pauline Tarn's life. She is described as very
+ beautiful, very simple and sweet-natured, and highly accomplished
+ in many directions. She suffered, however, from nervous
+ overtension and incurable melancholy. Toward the close of her
+ life she was converted to Catholicism and died in 1909, at the
+ age of 32. She is buried in the cemetery at Passy. Her best verse
+ is by some considered among the finest in the French language.
+ (Charles Brun, &quot;Pauline Tarn,&quot; <i>Notes and Queries</i>, 22 Aug.,
+ 1914; the same writer, who knew her well, has also written a
+ pamphlet, <i>Ren&eacute;e Vivien</i>, Sansot, Paris, 1911.) Her chief volumes
+ of poems are <i>Etudes et Preludes</i> (1901), <i>Cendres et Poussi&egrave;res</i>
+ (1902), <i>Evocations</i> (1903). A novel, <i>Une Femme M'Apparut</i>
+ (1904), is said to be to some extent autobiographical. &quot;Ren&eacute;e
+ Vivien&quot; also wrote a volume on Sappho with translations, and a
+ further volume of poems, <i>Les Kithar&egrave;des</i>, suggested by the
+ fragments which remain of the minor women poets of Greece,
+ followers of Sappho. </p></div>
+
+<p>It is, moreover, noteworthy that a remarkably large proportion of the
+cases in which homosexuality has led to crimes of violence, or otherwise
+come under medico-legal observation, <a name='2_Page_201'></a>has been among women. It is well
+know that the part taken by women generally in open criminality, and
+especially in crimes of violence, is small as compared with men.<a name='2_FNanchor_144'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_144'><sup>[144]</sup></a> In
+the homosexual field, as we might have anticipated, the conditions are to
+some extent reversed. Inverted men, in whom a more or less feminine
+temperament is so often found, are rarely impelled to acts of aggressive
+violence, though they frequently commit suicide. Inverted women, who may
+retain their feminine emotionality combined with some degree of infantile
+impulsiveness and masculine energy, present a favorable soil for the seeds
+of passional crime, under those conditions of jealousy and allied emotions
+which must so often enter into the invert's life.</p>
+
+<div class='blkquot'><p>The first conspicuous example of this tendency in recent times is
+ the Memphis case (1892) in the United States. (Arthur Macdonald,
+ &quot;Observation de Sexualit&eacute; Pathologique Feminine,&quot; <i>Archives
+ d'Anthropologie Criminelle</i>, May, 1895; see also Krafft-Ebing,
+ <i>Psychopathia Sexualis</i>, Eng. trans, of 10th ed., p. 550.) In
+ this case a congenital sexual invert, Alice Mitchell, planned a
+ marriage with Freda Ward, taking a male-name and costume. This
+ scheme was frustrated by Freda's sister, and Alice Mitchell then
+ cut Freda's throat. There is no reason to suppose that she was
+ insane at the time of the murder. She was a typical invert of a
+ very pronounced kind. Her mother had been insane and had
+ homicidal impulses. She herself was considered unbalanced, and
+ was masculine in her habits from her earliest years. Her face was
+ obviously unsymmetrical and she had an appearance of youthfulness
+ below her age. She was not vicious, and had little knowledge of
+ sexual matters, but when she kissed Freda she was ashamed of
+ being seen, while Freda could see no reason for being ashamed.
+ She was adjudged insane.</p>
+
+<p> There have been numerous cases in America more recently. One case
+ (for some details concerning which I am indebted to Dr. J. G.
+ Kiernan, of Chicago) is that of the &quot;Tiller Sisters,&quot; two
+ quintroons, who for many years had acted together under that name
+ in cheap theaters. One, who was an invert, with a horror of men
+ dating from early girlhood, was sexually attached to the other,
+ who was without inborn inversion, and was eventually induced by a
+ man to leave the invert. The latter, overcome by jealousy, broke
+ into the apartment of the couple and shot the man dead. She was
+ tried, and sent to prison for <a name='2_Page_202'></a>life. A defense of insanity was
+ made, but for this there was no evidence. In another case, also
+ occurring in Chicago (reported in <i>Medicine</i>, June, 1899, and
+ <i>Alienist and Neurologist</i>, October, 1899), a trained nurse lived
+ for fourteen years with a young woman who left her on four
+ different occasions, but was each time induced to return;
+ finally, however, she left and married, whereupon the nurse shot
+ the husband, who was not, however, fatally wounded. The culprit
+ in this case had been twice married, but had not lived with
+ either of her husbands; it was stated that her mother had died in
+ an asylum, and that her brother had committed suicide. She was
+ charged with disorderly conduct, and subjected to a fine.</p>
+
+<p> In another later case in Chicago a Russian girl of 22, named Anna
+ Rubinowitch, shot from motives of jealousy another Russian girl
+ to whom she had been devoted from childhood, and then fatally
+ shot herself. The relations between the two girls had been very
+ intimate. &quot;Our love affair is one purely of the soul,&quot; Anna
+ Rubinowitch was accustomed to say; &quot;we love each other on a
+ higher plane than that of earth.&quot; (I am informed that there were
+ in fact physical relationships; the sexual organs were normal.)
+ This continued, with great devotion on each side, until Anna's
+ &quot;sweetheart&quot; began to show herself susceptible to the advances of
+ a male wooer. This aroused uncontrollable jealousy in Anna, whose
+ father, it may be noted, had committed suicide by shooting some
+ years previously.</p>
+
+<p> Homosexual relationships are also a cause of suicide among women.
+ Such a case was reported in Massachusetts early in 1901. A girl
+ of 21 had been tended during a period of nervous prostration,
+ apparently of hysterical nature, by a friend and neighbor,
+ fourteen years her senior, married and having children. An
+ intimate friendship grew up, equally ardent on both sides. The
+ mother of the younger woman and the husband of the other took
+ measures to put a stop to the intimacy, and the girl was sent
+ away to a distant city; stolen interviews, however, still
+ occurred. Finally, when the obstacles became insurmountable, the
+ younger woman bought a revolver and deliberately shot herself in
+ the temple, in presence of her mother, dying immediately. Though
+ sometimes thought to act rather strangely, she was a great
+ favorite with all, handsome, very athletic, fond of all outdoor
+ sports, an energetic religious worker, possessing a fine voice,
+ and was an active member of many clubs and societies. The older
+ woman belonged to an aristocratic family and was loved and
+ respected by all. In another case in New York in 1905 a retired
+ sailor, &quot;Captain John Weed,&quot; who had commanded transatlantic
+ vessels for many years, was admitted to a Home for old sailors
+ and shortly after became ill and despondent, and cut his throat.
+ It was then found that &quot;Captain Weed&quot; was really a woman. I am
+ <a name='2_Page_203'></a>informed that the old sailor's despondency and suicide were due
+ to enforced separation from a female companion.</p>
+
+<p> The infatuation of young girls for actresses and other prominent
+ women may occasionally lead to suicide. Thus in Philadelphia, a
+ few years ago, a girl of 19, belonging to a very wealthy family,
+ beautiful and highly educated, acquired an absorbing infatuation
+ for Miss Mary Garden, the <i>prima donna</i>, with whom she had no
+ personal acquaintance. The young girl would kneel in worship
+ before the singer's portrait, and studied hairdressing and
+ manicuring in the hope of becoming Miss Garden's maid. When she
+ realized that her dream was hopeless she shot herself with a
+ revolver. (Cases more or less resembling those here brought
+ forward occur from time to time in all parts of the civilized
+ world. Reports, mostly from current newspapers, of such cases, as
+ well as of simple transvestism, or Eonism, in both women and men,
+ will be found in the publications of the Berlin
+ Wissenschaftlich-humanit&auml;ren Komitee: the <i>Monatsberichte</i> up to
+ 1909, then in the <i>Vierteljahrsberichte</i>, and from 1913 onward in
+ the <i>Jahrbuch f&uuml;r sexuelle Zwischenstufen</i>.) </p></div>
+
+<p>Yet, until recently, comparatively little has been known of sexual
+inversion in women. Even so lately as 1901 (after the publication of the
+first edition of the present Study), Krafft-Ebing wrote that scarcely
+fifty cases had been recorded. The chief monographs devoted but little
+space to women.</p>
+
+<div class='blkquot'><p>Krafft-Ebing himself, in the earlier editions of <i>Psychopathia
+ Sexualis</i>, gave little special attention to inversion in women,
+ although he published a few cases. Moll, however, included a
+ valuable chapter on the subject in his <i>Kontr&auml;re
+ Sexualempfindung</i>, narrating numerous cases, and inversion in
+ women also received special attention in the present Study.
+ Hirschfeld, however, in his <i>Homosexualit&auml;t</i> (1914) is the first
+ authority who has been able to deal with feminine homosexuality
+ as completely co-ordinate with masculine homosexuality. The two
+ manifestations, masculine and feminine, are placed on the same
+ basis and treated together throughout the work. </p></div>
+
+<p>It is, no doubt, not difficult to account for this retardation in the
+investigation of sexual inversion in women. Notwithstanding the severity
+with which homosexuality in women has been visited in a few cases, for the
+most part men seem to have been indifferent toward it; when it has been
+made a crime or a cause for divorce in men, it has usually been considered
+as no <a name='2_Page_204'></a>offense at all in women.<a name='2_FNanchor_145'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_145'><sup>[145]</sup></a> Another reason is that it is less
+easy to detect in women; we are accustomed to a much greater familiarity
+and intimacy between women than between men, and we are less apt to
+suspect the existence of any abnormal passion. And, allied with this
+cause, we have also to bear in mind the extreme ignorance and the extreme
+reticence of women regarding any abnormal or even normal manifestation of
+their sexual life. A woman may feel a high degree of sexual attraction for
+another woman without realizing that her affection is sexual, and when she
+does realize this, she is nearly always very unwilling to reveal the
+nature of her intimate experience, even with the adoption of precautions,
+and although the fact may be present to her that, by helping to reveal the
+nature of her abnormality, she may be helping to lighten the burden of it
+on other women. Among the numerous confessions voluntarily sent to
+Krafft-Ebing there is not one by a woman. There is, again, the further
+reason that well-marked and fully developed cases of inversion are
+probably rarer in women, though a slighter degree may be more common; in
+harmony with the greater affectability of the feminine organism to slight
+stimuli, and its lesser liability to serious variation.<a name='2_FNanchor_146'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_146'><sup>[146]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>The same aberrations that are found among men are, however, everywhere
+found among women. Feminine inversion has sometimes been regarded as a
+vice of modern refined civilization. Yet it was familiar to the
+Anglo-Saxons, and Theodore's Penitential in the seventh century assigned a
+penance of three years (considerably less than that assigned to men, or
+for bestiality)<a name='2_Page_205'></a> to &quot;a woman fornicating with a woman.&quot; Among the women of
+savages in all parts of the world homosexuality is found, though it is
+less frequently recorded than among men.<a name='2_FNanchor_147'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_147'><sup>[147]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>In New Zealand it is stated on the authority of Moerenhout (though I have
+not been able to find the reference) that the women practised Lesbianism.
+In South America, where inversion is common among men, we find similar
+phenomena in women. Among Brazilian tribes Gandavo<a name='2_FNanchor_148'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_148'><sup>[148]</sup></a> wrote:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class='blkquot'><p>&quot;There are certain women among these Indians who determine to be
+ chaste and know no man. These leave every womanly occupation and
+ imitate the men. They wear their hair the same way as the men;
+ they go to war with them or hunting, bearing their bows; they
+ continue always in the company of men, and each has a woman who
+ serves her and with whom she lives.&quot; </p></div>
+
+<p>This has some analogy with the phenomena seen among North American men.
+Dr. Holder, who has carefully studied the <i>bot&eacute;</i>, tells me that he has met
+no corresponding phenomena in women.</p>
+
+<p>There is no doubt, however, that homosexuality among women is well known
+to the American Indians in various regions. Thus the Salish Indians of
+British Columbia have a myth of an old woman who had intercourse with a
+young woman by means of a horn used as a penis.<a name='2_FNanchor_149'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_149'><sup>[149]</sup></a> In the mythology of
+the Assiniboine Indians (of Canada and Montana) and the Fox Indians (of
+Iowa) there are also legends of feminine homosexuality, supposed to have
+been derived from the Algonkin Cree Indians, who were closely connected
+with both.<a name='2_FNanchor_150'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_150'><sup>[150]</sup></a> <a name='2_Page_206'></a></p>
+
+<div class='blkquot'><p>According to the Assiniboine legend, a man's wife fell in love
+ with his sister and eloped with her, a boneless child being the
+ result of the union; the husband pursued the couple, and killed
+ his wife as well as the child; no one cared to avenge her death.
+ The Fox legend, entitled &quot;Two Maidens who Played the Harlot with
+ Each Other,&quot; runs as follows: &quot;It is said that once on a time
+ long ago there were two young women who were friends together. It
+ is told that there were also two youths who tried to woo the two
+ maidens, but they were not able even so much as to talk with
+ them. After awhile the youths began to suspect something wrong.
+ So once during the summer, when the two maidens started away to
+ peel off bark, the youths followed, staying just far enough
+ behind to keep them in sight. While the girls were peeling the
+ bark, the youths kept themselves hidden. After awhile they no
+ longer heard the sound of the maidens at work. Whereupon they
+ began to creep up to where they were. When they drew nigh,
+ behold, the maidens were in the act of taking off their clothes.
+ The first to disrobe flung herself down on the ground and lay
+ there. 'Pray, what are these girls going to do?' was the feeling
+ in the hearts of the youths. And to their amazement the girls
+ began to lie with each other. Thereupon the youths ran to where
+ the girls were. She who was lying on top instantly fell over
+ backward. Her clitoris was standing out and had a queer shape; it
+ was like a turtle's penis. Thereupon the maidens began to plead
+ with the youths: 'Oh, don't tell on us!' they said. 'Truly it is
+ not of our own free desire that we have done this thing We have
+ done it under the influence of some unknown being.' It is said
+ that afterward one of the maidens became big with child. In the
+ course of time, she gave birth, and the child was like a
+ soft-shell turtle.&quot; </p></div>
+
+<p>In Bali, according to Jacobs (as quoted by Ploss and Bartels),
+homosexuality is almost as common among women as among men, though it is
+more secretly exercised; the methods of gratification adopted are either
+digital or lingual, or else by bringing the parts together (tribadism).</p>
+
+<p>Baumann, who noted inversion among the male negro population of Zanzibar,
+finds that it is also not rare among women. Although Oriental manners
+render it impossible for such women to wear men's clothes openly, they do
+so in private, and are recognized by other women by their man-like
+bearing, as also by the fact that women's garments do not suit them. They
+show a preference for masculine occupations, and seek sexual satisfaction
+among women who have the same inclinations, or else among <a name='2_Page_207'></a>normal women,
+who are won over by presents or other means. In addition to tribadism or
+cunnilinctus, they sometimes use an ebony or ivory phallus, with a kind of
+glans at one end, or sometimes at both ends; in the latter case it can be
+used by two women at once, and sometimes it has a hole bored through it by
+which warm water can be injected; it is regarded as an Arab invention, and
+is sometimes used by normal women shut up in harems, and practically
+deprived of sexual satisfaction.<a name='2_FNanchor_151'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_151'><sup>[151]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>Among the Arab women, according to Kocher, homosexual practices are rare,
+though very common among Arab men. In Egypt, however, according to Godard,
+Kocher, and others, it is almost fashionable, and every woman in the harem
+has a &quot;friend.&quot; In Turkey homosexuality is sometimes said to be rare among
+women. But it would appear to be found in the harems and women's baths of
+Turkey, as well as of Islam generally. Brant&ocirc;me in the sixteenth century
+referred to the Lesbianism of Turkish women at the baths, and Leo
+Africanus in the same century mentioned the tribadism of Moorish women and
+the formal organization of tribadic prostitution in Fez. There was an
+Osmanli Sapphic poetess, Mihiri, whose grave is at Amasia, and Vambery and
+Achestorides agree as to the prevalence of feminine homosexuality in
+Turkey.<a name='2_FNanchor_152'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_152'><sup>[152]</sup></a> Among the negroes and mulattoes of French creole countries,
+according to Corre, homosexuality is very common. &quot;I know a lady of great
+beauty,&quot; he remarks, &quot;a stranger in Guadalupe and the mother of a family,
+who is obliged to stay away from the markets and certain shops because of
+the excessive admiration of mulatto women and negresses, and the impudent
+invitations which they dare to address to her.&quot;<a name='2_FNanchor_153'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_153'><sup>[153]</sup></a> He refers to several
+cases of more or less violent sexual attempts by women on young colored
+girls of 12 or 14, and observes that such attempts by men on children of
+their own sex are much rarer.</p>
+
+<p>In China (according to Matignon) and in Cochin China<a name='2_Page_208'></a> (according to
+Lorion) homosexuality does not appear to be common among women. In India,
+however, it is probably as prevalent among women as it certainly is among
+men.</p>
+
+<div class='blkquot'><p>In the first edition of this Study I quoted the opinion of Dr.
+ Buchanan, then Superintendant of the Central Gaol of Bengal at
+ Bhagalpur, who informed me that he had never come across a case
+ and that his head-gaoler had never heard of such a thing in
+ twenty-five years' experience. Another officer in the Indian
+ Medical Service assures me, however, that there cannot be the
+ least doubt as to the frequency of homosexuality among women in
+ India, either inside or outside gaols. I am indebted to him for
+ the following notes on this point:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p> &quot;That homosexual relationships are common enough among Indian
+ women is evidenced by the fact that the Hindustani language has
+ five words to denote the tribade: (1) <i>d&uacute;g&aacute;n&aacute;</i>, (2) <i>zan&agrave;kh&eacute;</i>,
+ (3) <i>sa'tar</i>, (4) <i>chapath&aacute;i</i>, and (5) <i>chapatb&aacute;z</i>. The <i>modus
+ operandi</i> is generally what Martial calls <i>geminos committere
+ cunnos</i>, but sometimes a phallus, called <i>saburah</i>, is employed.
+ The act itself is called <i>chapat</i> or <i>chapti</i>, and the Hindustani
+ poets, Nazir, Rangin, J&aacute;n S'&aacute;heb, treat of Lesbian love very
+ extensively and sometimes very crudely. J&aacute;n S'&aacute;heb, a woman poet,
+ sings to the effect that intercourse with a woman by means of a
+ phallus is to be preferred to the satisfaction offered by a male
+ lover. The common euphemism employed when speaking of two
+ tribades who live together is that they 'live apart.' So much for
+ the literary evidence as to the prevalence of what, <i>mirable
+ dictu</i>, Dr. Buchanan's gaoler was ignorant of.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;Now for facts. In the gaol of R. the superintendent discovered a
+ number of phalli in the females' inclosure; they were made of
+ clay and sun-dried and bore marks of use. In the gaol of S. was a
+ woman who (as is usual with tribades in India) wore male attire,
+ and was well known for her sexual proclivities. An examination
+ revealed the following: Face much lined, mamm&aelig; of masculine type,
+ but nipples elongated and readily erectile; gluteal and iliac
+ regions quite of masculine type, as also the thighs; clitoris,
+ with enlarged glands, readily erectile; nymph&aelig; thickened and
+ enlarged; vulvar orifice patent, for she had in early youth been
+ a prostitute; the voice was almost contralto. Her partner was of
+ low type, but eminently feminine in configuration and manner. In
+ this case I heard that 'the man' went to a local ascetic and
+ begged his intercession with the deity, so that she might
+ impregnate her partner. ('The Hindoo medical works mention the
+ possibility of a woman uniting with another woman in sexual
+ embraces and begetting a boneless fetus.' <i>Short History of Aryan
+ Medical Science</i>, p. 44.)</p>
+
+<p> &quot;In the town of D. there 'lived apart' two women, one a Brahmin,
+ <a name='2_Page_209'></a>the other a grazier; their <i>modus operandi</i> was tribadism, as an
+ eyewitness informed me. In S. I was called in to treat the widow
+ of a wealthy Mohammedan; I had occasion to examine the pudenda,
+ and found what Martineau would have called the indelible stigmata
+ of early masturbation and later sapphism. She admitted the
+ impeachment and confessed that she was on the best of terms with
+ her three remarkably well-formed and good-looking handmaidens.
+ This lady said that she began masturbation at an early age, 'just
+ like all other women,' and that sapphism came after the age of
+ puberty. Another Mohammedan woman whom I knew, and who had a very
+ large clitoris, told me that she had been initiated into Lesbian
+ love at 12 by a neighbor and had intermittently practised it ever
+ since. I might also instance two sisters of the gardener caste,
+ both widows, who 'lived apart' and indulged in simultaneous
+ sapphism.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;That sometimes the actors in tribadism are most vigorous is
+ shown by the fact that, in the central gaol of &mdash;&mdash;, swelling of
+ the vulva was admitted to have been caused by the embraces of two
+ female convicts. The subordinate who told me this mentioned it
+ quite incidentally while relating his experiences as hospital
+ assistant at this gaol. When I questioned him he stated that the
+ woman, whom he was called to treat, told him that she could never
+ 'satisfy herself' with men, but only with women. He added that
+ tribadism was 'quite common in the gaol.'&quot; </p></div>
+
+<p>The foregoing sketch may serve to show that homosexual practices
+certainly, and probably definite sexual inversion, are very widespread
+among women in very many and various parts of the world, though it is
+likely that, as among men, there are variations&mdash;geographical, racial,
+national, or social&mdash;in the frequency or intensity of its obvious
+manifestations. Thus, in the eighteenth century, Casanova remarked that
+the women of Provence are specially inclined to Lesbianism.</p>
+
+<p>In European prisons homosexual practices flourish among the women fully as
+much, it may probably be said, as among the men. There is, indeed, some
+reason for supposing that these phenomena are here sometimes even more
+decisively marked than among men.<a name='2_FNanchor_154'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_154'><sup>[154]</sup></a> This prevalence of homosexuality
+among <a name='2_Page_210'></a>women in prison is connected with the close relationship between
+feminine criminality and prostitution.</p>
+
+<p>The frequency of homosexual practices among prostitutes is a fact of some
+interest, and calls for special explanation, for, at the first glance, it
+seems in opposition to all that we know concerning the exciting causes of
+homosexuality. Regarding the fact there can be no question.<a name='2_FNanchor_155'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_155'><sup>[155]</sup></a> It has
+been noted by all who are acquainted with the lives of prostitutes, though
+opinion may differ as to its frequency. In Berlin, Moll was told in
+well-informed quarters, the proportion of prostitutes with Lesbian
+tendencies is about 25 per cent. This was almost the proportion at Paris
+many years ago, according to Parent-Duch&acirc;telet; today, according to
+Chevalier, it is larger; and Bourneville believes that 75 per cent, of the
+inmates of the Parisian venereal hospitals have practised homosexuality.
+Hammer in Germany has found among 66 prostitutes that 41 were
+homosexual.<a name='2_FNanchor_156'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_156'><sup>[156]</sup></a> Hirschfeld thinks that inverted women are specially prone
+to become prostitutes.<a name='2_FNanchor_157'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_157'><sup>[157]</sup></a> Eulenburg believes, on the other hand, that
+the conditions of their life favor homosexuality among prostitutes; &quot;a
+homosexual union seems to them higher, purer, more innocent, and more
+ideal.&quot;<a name='2_FNanchor_158'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_158'><sup>[158]</sup></a> There is, however, no fundamental contradiction between these
+two views; they are probably both right.</p>
+
+<p>In London, so far as my inquiries extend, homosexuality among prostitutes
+is very much less prevalent, and in a well-marked form is confined to a
+comparatively small section. I am <a name='2_Page_211'></a>indebted to a friend for the following
+note: &quot;From my experience of the Parisian prostitute, I gather that
+Lesbianism in Paris is extremely prevalent; indeed, one might almost say
+normal. In particular, most of the chahut-dancers of the Moulin-Rouge,
+Casino de Paris, and the other public balls are notorious for going in
+couples, and, for the most part, they prefer not to be separated, even in
+their most professional moments with the other sex. In London the thing
+is, naturally, much less obvious, and, I think, much less prevalent; but
+it is certainly not infrequent. A certain number of well-known prostitutes
+are known for their tendencies in this direction, which do not, however,
+interfere in any marked way with the ordinary details of their profession.
+I do not personally know of a single prostitute who is exclusively
+Lesbian; I have heard vaguely that there are one or two such anomalies.
+But I have heard a swell <i>cocotte</i> at the Corinthian announce to the whole
+room that she was going home with a girl; and no one doubted the
+statement. Her name, indeed, was generally coupled with that of a
+fifth-rate actress. Another woman of the same kind has a little clientele
+of women who buy her photographs in Burlington Arcade. In the lower ranks
+of the profession all this is much less common. One often finds women who
+have simply never heard of such a thing; they know of it in regard to men,
+but not in regard to women. And they are, for the most part, quite
+horrified at the notion, which they consider part and parcel of 'French
+beastliness.' Of course, almost every girl has her friend, and, when not
+separately occupied, they often sleep together; but, while in separate,
+rare cases, this undoubtedly means all that it can mean, for the most
+part, so far as one can judge, it means no more than it would mean among
+ordinary girls.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>It is evident that there must be some radical causes for the frequency of
+homosexuality among prostitutes. One such cause doubtless lies in the
+character of the prostitute's relations with men; these relations are of a
+professional character, and, as the business element becomes emphasized,
+the possibility of sexual satisfaction diminishes; at the best, also;
+there lacks the sense <a name='2_Page_212'></a>of social equality, the feeling of possession, and
+scope for the exercise of feminine affection and devotion. These the
+prostitute must usually be forced to find either in a &quot;bully&quot; or in
+another woman.<a name='2_FNanchor_159'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_159'><sup>[159]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>Apart from this fact it must be borne in mind that, in a very large number
+of cases, prostitutes show in slight or more marked degree many of the
+signs of neurotic heredity,<a name='2_FNanchor_160'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_160'><sup>[160]</sup></a> and it would not be surprising if they
+present the germs of homosexuality in an unusually high degree. The life
+of the prostitute may well develop such latent germs; and so we have an
+undue tendency to homosexuality, just as we have it among criminals, and,
+to a much less extent, among persons of genius and intellect.</p>
+
+<p>Homosexuality is specially fostered by those employments which keep women
+in constant association, not only by day, but often at night also, without
+the company of men. This is, for instance, the case in convents, and
+formerly, at all events,&mdash;however, it may be today,&mdash;homosexuality was
+held to be very prevalent in convents. This was especially so in the
+eighteenth century when very many young girls, without any religious
+vocation, were put into convents.<a name='2_FNanchor_161'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_161'><sup>[161]</sup></a> The same again is today the case
+with the female servants in large hotels, among whom homosexual <a name='2_Page_213'></a>practices
+nave been found very common.<a name='2_FNanchor_162'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_162'><sup>[162]</sup></a> Laycock, many years ago, noted the
+prevalence of manifestations of this kind, which he regarded as
+hysterical, among seamstresses, lace-makers, etc., confined for hours in
+close contact with one another in heated rooms. The circumstances under
+which numbers of young women are employed during the day in large shops
+and factories, and sleep in the establishment, two in a room or even two
+in a bed, are favorable to the development of homosexual practices.</p>
+
+<div class='blkquot'><p>In England it is seldom that anyone cares to investigate these
+ phenomena, though, they certainly exist. They have been more
+ thoroughly studied elsewhere. Thus, in Rome, Niceforo, who
+ studied various aspects of the lives of the working classes,
+ succeeded in obtaining much precise information concerning the
+ manners and customs of the young girls in dressmaking and
+ tailoring work-rooms. He remarks that few of those who see the
+ &quot;virtuous daughters of the people,&quot; often not more than 12 years
+ old, walking along the streets with the dressmaker's box under
+ their arm, modestly bent head and virginal air, realize the
+ intense sexual preoccupations often underlying these appearances.
+ In the work-rooms the conversation perpetually revolves around
+ sexual subjects in the absence of the mistress or forewoman, and
+ even in her presence the slang that prevails in the work-rooms
+ leads to dialogues with a double meaning. A state of sexual
+ excitement is thus aroused which sometimes relieves itself
+ mentally by psychic onanism, sometimes by some form of
+ masturbation; one girl admitted to Niceforo that by allowing her
+ thoughts to dwell on the subject while at work she sometimes
+ produced physical sexual excitement as often as four times a day.
+ (See also vol. i of these <i>Studies</i>, &quot;Auto-erotism.&quot;) Sometimes,
+ however, a vague kind of homosexuality is produced, the girls,
+ excited by their own thoughts and their conversation, being still
+ further excited by contact with each other. &quot;In summer, in one
+ work-room, some of the girls wear no drawers, and they unbutton
+ their bodices, and work with crossed legs, more or less
+ uncovered. In this position, the girls draw near and inspect one
+ another; some boast of their white legs, and, then the petticoats
+ are raised altogether for more careful comparison. Many enjoy
+ <a name='2_Page_214'></a>this inspection of nudity, and experience real sexual pleasure.
+ From midday till 2 P.M., during the hours of greatest heat, when
+ all are in this condition, and the mistress, in her chemise (and
+ sometimes, with no shame at the workers' presence, even without
+ it), falls asleep on the sofa, all the girls, <i>without one
+ exception</i>, masturbate themselves. The heat seems to sharpen
+ their desires and morbidly arouse all their senses. The
+ voluptuous emotions, restrained during the rest of the day, break
+ out with irresistible force; stimulated by the spectacle of each
+ other's nakedness, some place their legs together and thus
+ heighten the spasm by the illusion of contact with a man.&quot; In
+ this way they reach mutual masturbation. &quot;It is noteworthy,
+ however,&quot; Niceforo points out, &quot;that these couples for mutual
+ masturbation are never Lesbian couples. Tribadism is altogether
+ absent from the factories and work-rooms.&quot; He even believes that
+ it does not exist among girls of the working class. He further
+ describes how, in another work-room, during the hot hours of the
+ day in summer, when no work is done, some of the girls retire
+ into the fitting-room, and, having fastened their chemises round
+ their legs and thighs with pins, so as to imitate trousers, play
+ at being men and pretend to have intercourse with the others.
+ (Niceforo, <i>Il Gergo</i>, cap. vi, 1897, Turin.) I have reproduced
+ these details from Niceforo's careful study because, although
+ they may seem to be trivial at some points, they clearly bring
+ out the very important distinction between a merely temporary
+ homosexuality and true inversion. The amusements of these young
+ girls may not be considered eminently innocent or wholesome, but,
+ on the other hand, they are not radically morbid or vicious. They
+ are strictly, and even consciously, <i>play</i>; they are dominated by
+ the thought that the true sexual ideal is normal relationship
+ with a man, and they would certainly disappear in the presence of
+ a man.</p>
+
+<p> It must be remembered that Niceforo's observations were made
+ among girls who were mostly young. In the large factories, where
+ many adult women are employed, the phenomena tend to be rarer,
+ but of much less trivial and playful character. At Wolverhampton,
+ some forty years ago, the case was reported of a woman in a
+ galvanizing &quot;store&quot; who, after dinner, indecently assaulted a
+ girl who was a new hand. Two young women held the victim down,
+ and this seems to show that homosexual vice was here common and
+ recognized. No doubt, this case is exceptional in its brutality.
+ It throws, however, a significant light on the conditions
+ prevailing in factories. In Spain, in the large factories where
+ many adult women are employed, especially in the great tobacco
+ factory at Seville, Lesbian relationships seem to be not
+ uncommon. Here the women work in an atmosphere which in summer is
+ so hot that they throw off the greater part of their clothing, to
+ such an extent that a bell is rung whenever a visitor is
+ introduced into a work-room, in order <a name='2_Page_215'></a>to warn the workers. Such
+ an environment predisposes to the formation of homosexual
+ relationships. When I was in Spain some years ago an incident
+ occurred at the Seville F&aacute;brica de Tabacos which attracted much
+ attention in the newspapers, and, though it was regarded as
+ unusual, it throws light on the life of the workers. One morning
+ as the women were entering the work-room and amid the usual scene
+ of animation changing their Manila shawls for the light costume
+ worn during work, one drew out a small clasp-knife and, attacking
+ another, rapidly inflicted six or seven wounds on her face and
+ neck, threatening to kill anyone who approached. Both these
+ <i>cigarreras</i> were superior workers, engaged in the most skilled
+ kind of work, and had been at the factory for many years. In
+ appearance they were described as presenting a striking contrast:
+ the aggressor, who was 48 years of age, was of masculine air,
+ tall and thin, with an expression of firm determination on her
+ wrinkled face; the victim, on the other hand, whose age was 30,
+ was plump and good-looking and of pleasing disposition. The
+ reason at first assigned for the attack on the younger woman was
+ that her mother had insulted the elder woman's son. It appeared,
+ however, that a close friendship had existed between the two
+ women, that latterly the younger woman had formed a friendship
+ with the forewoman of her work-room, and that the elder woman,
+ animated by jealousy, then resolved to murder both; this design
+ was frustrated by the accidental absence of the forewoman that
+ day. </p></div>
+
+<p>In theaters the abnormal sexuality stimulated by such association in work
+is complicated by the general tendency for homosexuality to be connected
+with dramatic aptitude, a point to which I shall have to refer later on. I
+am indebted to a friend for the following note: &quot;Passionate friendships
+among girls, from the most innocent to the most elaborate excursions in
+the direction of Lesbos, are extremely common in theaters, both among
+actresses and, even more, among chorus-and ballet-girls. Here the
+pell-mell of the dressing-rooms, the wait of perhaps two hours between the
+performances, during which all the girls are cooped up, in a state of
+inaction and of excitement, in a few crowded dressing-rooms, afford every
+opportunity for the growth of this particular kind of sentiment. In most
+of the theaters there is a little circle of girls, somewhat avoided by the
+others, or themselves careless of further acquaintanceship, who profess
+the most unbounded devotion to one another. Most of these <a name='2_Page_216'></a>girls are
+equally ready to flirt with the opposite sex, but I know certain ones
+among them who will scarcely speak to a man, and who are never seen
+without their particular 'pal' or 'chum,' who, if she gets moved to
+another theater, will come around and wait for her friend at the
+stage-door. But here, again, it is but seldom that the experience is
+carried very far. The fact is that the English girl, especially of the
+lower and middle classes, whether she has lost her virtue or not, is
+extremely fettered by conventional notions. Ignorance and habit are two
+restraining influences from the carrying out of this particular kind of
+perversion to its logical conclusions. It is, therefore, among the upper
+ranks, alike of society and of prostitution, that Lesbianism is most
+definitely to be met with, for here we have much greater liberty of
+action, and much greater freedom from prejudices.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>With girls, as with boys, it is in the school, at the evolution of
+puberty, that homosexuality usually first shows itself. It may originate
+in a way mainly peripheral or mainly central. In the first case, two
+children, perhaps when close to each other in bed, more or less
+unintentionally generate in each other a certain amount of sexual
+irritation, which they foster by mutual touching and kissing. This is a
+spurious kind of homosexuality, the often precocious play of the normal
+instinct. In the girl who is congenitally predisposed to homosexuality it
+will continue and develop; in the majority it will be forgotten as quickly
+as possible, not without shame, in the presence of the normal object of
+sexual love.</p>
+
+<div class='blkquot'><p>I may quote as fairly typical the following observation supplied
+ by a lady who cannot be called inverted: &quot;Like so many other
+ children and girls, I was first taught self-indulgence by a girl
+ at school, and I passed on my knowledge to one or two others,
+ with one of whom I remember once, when we were just 16, spending
+ the night sensually. We were horribly ashamed after, and that was
+ the only time. When I was only 8 there was a girl of 13 who liked
+ to play with my body, and taught me to play with hers, though I
+ rather disliked doing so. We slept together, and this went on at
+ intervals for six months. These things, for the sake of getting
+ enjoyment, and not with any passion, are not uncommon with
+ children, but less common, I think, than people <a name='2_Page_217'></a>sometimes
+ imagine. I believe I could recall without much difficulty, the
+ number of times such things happened with me. In the case I
+ mentioned when I did for one night feel&mdash;or try to excite in
+ myself and my girl-companion of 16&mdash;sensual passion, we had as
+ little children slept together a few times and done these things,
+ and meeting after an absence, just at that age, recalled our
+ childish memories, and were carried away by sexual impulse. But I
+ never felt any peculiar affection or passion for her even at the
+ time, nor she for me. We only felt that our sensual nature was
+ strong at the time, and had betrayed us into something we were
+ ashamed of, and, therefore, we avoided letting ourselves sleep
+ too close after that day. I think we disliked each other, and
+ were revolted whenever we thought of that night, feeling that
+ each had degraded the other and herself.&quot; </p></div>
+
+<p>The cases in which the source is mainly central, rather than peripheral,
+nevertheless merge into the foregoing, with no clear line of demarcation.
+In such cases a girl forms an ardent attachment for another girl, probably
+somewhat older than herself, often a schoolfellow, sometimes her
+schoolmistress, upon whom she will lavish an astonishing amount of
+affection and devotion. There may or not be any return; usually the return
+consists of a gracious acceptance of the affectionate services. The girl
+who expends this wealth of devotion is surcharged with emotion, but she is
+often unconscious or ignorant of the sexual impulse, and she seeks for no
+form of sexual satisfaction. Kissing and the privilege of sleeping with
+the friend are, however, sought, and at such times it often happens that
+even the comparatively unresponsive friend feels more or less definite
+sexual emotion (pudendal turgescence, with secretion of mucus and
+involuntary twitching of the neighboring muscles), though little or no
+attention may be paid to this phenomenon, and in the common ignorance of
+girls concerning sex matters it may not be understood. In some cases there
+is an attempt, either instinctive or intentional, to develop the sexual
+feeling by close embraces and kissing. This rudimentary kind of homosexual
+relationship is, I believe, more common among girls than among boys, and
+for this there are several reasons: (1) a boy more often has some
+acquaintance with sexual phenomena, and would frequently regard such a
+relationship as unmanly; (2) the girl has a stronger need of <a name='2_Page_218'></a>affection
+and self-devotion to another person than a boy has; (3) she has not, under
+our existing social conditions which compel young women to hold the
+opposite sex at arm's length, the same opportunities of finding an outlet
+for her sexual emotions; while (4) conventional propriety recognizes a
+considerable degree of physical intimacy between girls, thus at once
+encouraging and cloaking the manifestations of homosexuality.</p>
+
+<p>The ardent attachments which girls in schools and colleges form to each
+other and to their teachers constitute a subject which is of considerable
+psychological interest and of no little practical importance.<a name='2_FNanchor_163'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_163'><sup>[163]</sup></a> These
+girlish devotions, on the borderland between friendship and sexual
+passion, are found in all countries where girls are segregated for
+educational purposes, and their symptoms are, on the whole, singularly
+uniform, though they vary in intensity and character to some extent, from
+time to time and from place to place, sometimes assuming an epidemic form.
+They have been most carefully studied in Italy, where Obici and
+Marchesini&mdash;an alienist and a psychologist working in conjunction&mdash;have
+analyzed the phenomena with remarkable insight and delicacy and much
+wealth of illustrative material.<a name='2_FNanchor_164'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_164'><sup>[164]</sup></a> But exactly the same phenomena are
+everywhere found in English girls' schools, even of the most modern type,
+and in some of the large American women's colleges they have sometimes
+become so acute as to cause much anxiety.<a name='2_FNanchor_165'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_165'><sup>[165]</sup></a> On the whole, however, it
+is probable that such manifestations are regarded more indulgently in
+girls' than in boys' schools, and in view of the fact that the
+manifestations of affection are normally more pronounced between girls
+than between boys, this seems reasonable. The head mistress of an English
+training college writes:&mdash;<a name='2_Page_219'></a></p>
+
+<p>&quot;My own assumption on such, matters has been that affection does naturally
+belong to the body as well as the mind, and between two women is naturally
+and innocently expressed by, caresses. I have never therefore felt that I
+ought to warn any girl against the physical element in friendship, as
+such. The test I should probably suggest to them would be the same as one
+would use for any other relation&mdash;was the friendship helping life as a
+whole, making them keener, kinder, more industrious, etc., or was it
+hindering it?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Passionate friendships, of a more or less unconsciously sexual character,
+are common even outside and beyond school-life. It frequently happens that
+a period during which a young woman falls in love at a distance with some
+young man of her acquaintance alternates with periods of intimate
+attachment to a friend of her own sex. No congenital inversion is usually
+involved. It generally happens, in the end, either that relationship with
+a man brings the normal impulse into permanent play, or the steadying of
+the emotions in the stress of practical life leads to a knowledge of the
+real nature of such feelings and a consequent distaste for them. In some
+cases, on the other hand, such relationships, especially when formed after
+school-life, are fairly permanent. An energetic emotional woman, not
+usually beautiful, will perhaps be devoted to another who may have found
+some rather specialized lifework, but who may be very unpractical, and who
+has probably a very feeble sexual instinct; she is grateful for her
+friends's devotion, but may not actively reciprocate it. The actual
+specific sexual phenomena generated in such cases vary very greatly. The
+emotion may be latent or unconscious; it may be all on one side; it is
+often more or less recognized and shared. Such cases are on the borderland
+of true sexual inversion, but they cannot be included within its region.
+Sex in these relationships is scarcely the essential and fundamental
+element; it is more or less subordinate and parasitic. There is often a
+semblance of a sex-relationship from the marked divergence of the friends
+in physical and psychic qualities, and the nervous development of one or
+both the friends is sometimes slightly <a name='2_Page_220'></a>abnormal. We have to regard such
+relationships as hypertrophied friendships, the hypertrophy being due to
+unemployed sexual instinct.</p>
+
+<div class='blkquot'><p>The following narrative is written by a lady who holds a
+ responsible educational position: &quot;A friend of mine, two or three
+ years older than myself (I am 31), and living in the same house
+ with me, has been passing through a very unhappy time. Long
+ nervous strain connected with this has made her sleep badly, and
+ apt to wake in terrible depression about 3 o'clock in the
+ morning. In the early days of our friendship, about eight months
+ ago, she occasionally at these times took refuge with me. After a
+ while I insisted on her consulting a doctor, who advised her,
+ amongst other things, not to sleep alone. Thenceforth for two or
+ three months I induced her to share my room. After a week or two
+ she generally shared my bed for a time at the beginning of the
+ night, as it seemed to help her to sleep.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;Before this, about the second or third time that she came to me
+ in the early morning, I had been surprised and a little
+ frightened to find how pleasant it was to me to have her, and how
+ reluctant I was that she should go away. When we began regularly
+ to sleep in the same room, the physical part of our affection
+ grew rapidly very strong. It is natural for me generally to
+ caress my friends, but I soon could not be alone in a room with
+ this one without wanting to have my arms round her. It would have
+ been intolerable to me to live with her without being able to
+ touch her. We did not discuss it, but it was evident that the
+ desire was even stronger in her than in me.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;For some time it satisfied us fully to be in bed together. One
+ night, however, when she had had a cruelly trying day and I
+ wanted to find all ways of comforting her, I bared by breast for
+ her to lie on. Afterward it was clear that neither of us could be
+ satisfied without this. She groped for it like a child, and it
+ excited me much more to feel that than to uncover my breast and
+ arms altogether at once.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;Much of this excitement was sexually localized, and I was
+ haunted in the daytime by images of holding this woman in my
+ arms. I noticed also that my inclination to caress my other women
+ friends was not diminished, but increased. All this disturbed me
+ a good deal. The homosexual practices of which I had read lately
+ struck me as merely nasty; I could not imagines myself tempted to
+ them;&mdash;at the same time the whole matter was new to me, for I had
+ never wanted anyone even to share my bed before; I had read that
+ sex instinct was mysterious and unexpected, and I felt that I did
+ not know what might come next.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I knew only one elder person whom (for wide-mindedness,
+ gentleness, and saintliness) I could bear to consult; and to this
+ person, a <a name='2_Page_221'></a>middle-aged man, I wrote for advice. He replied by a
+ long letter of the most tender warning. I had better not weaken
+ my influence with my friend, he wrote, by going back suddenly or
+ without her consent, but I was to be very wary of going further;
+ there was fire about. I tried to put this into practice by
+ restraining myself constantly in our intercourse, by refraining
+ from caressing her, for instance, when I wanted to caress her and
+ knew that she wanted it. The only result seemed to be that the
+ desire was more tormenting and constant than ever.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;If at this point my friend had happened to die or go away, and
+ the incident had come to an end, I should probably have been left
+ nervous in these matters for years to come. I should have
+ faltered in the opinion I had always held, that bodily
+ expressions of love between women were as innocent as they were
+ natural; and I might have come nearer than I ever expected to the
+ doctrine of those convent teachers who forbid their girls to
+ embrace one another for fear an incalculable instinct should
+ carry them to the edge of an abyss.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;As it was, after a while I said a little on the subject to my
+ friend herself. I had been inclined to think that she might share
+ my anxiety, but she did not share it at all. She said to me that
+ she did not like these thoughts, that she cared for me more than
+ She had ever done for any person except one (now causing most of
+ her unhappiness), and wanted me in all possible ways, and that it
+ would make her sad to feel that I was trying not to want her in
+ one way because I thought it was wrong.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;On my part, I knew very well how much she did need and want me.
+ I knew that in relations with others she was spending the
+ greatest effort in following a course that I urged on her, and
+ was doing what I thought right in spite of the most painful
+ pressure on her to do wrong; and that she needed all the support
+ and comfort I could give her. It seemed to me, after our
+ conversation, that the right path for me lay not in giving way to
+ fears and scruples, but in giving my friend straightforwardly all
+ the love I could and all the kinds of love I could. I decided to
+ keep my eyes open for danger, but meanwhile to go on.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;We were living alone together at the time, and thenceforward we
+ did as we liked doing. As soon as we could, we moved to a bed
+ where we could sleep together all night. In the day when no one
+ was there we sat as close together as we wished, which was very
+ close. We kissed each other as often as we wanted to kiss each
+ other, which was very many times a day.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;The results of this, so far as I can see, have been wholly good.
+ We love each other warmly, but no temptation to nastiness has
+ ever come, and I cannot see now that it is at all likely to come.
+ With <a name='2_Page_222'></a>custom, the localized physical excitement has practically
+ disappeared, and I am no longer obsessed by imagined embraces.
+ The spiritual side of our affection seems to have grown steadily
+ stronger and more profitable since the physical side has, been
+ allowed to take its natural place.&quot; </p></div>
+
+<p>A class in which homosexuality, while fairly distinct, is only slightly
+marked, is formed by the women to whom the actively inverted woman is most
+attracted. These women differ, in the first place, from the normal, or
+average, woman in that they are not repelled or disgusted by lover-like
+advances from persons of their own sex. They are not usually attractive to
+the average man, though to this rule there are many exceptions. Their
+faces may be plain or ill-made, but not seldom they possess good figures:
+a point which is apt to carry more weight with the inverted woman than
+beauty of face. Their sexual impulses are seldom well marked, but they are
+of strongly affectionate nature. On the whole, they are women who are not
+very robust and well developed, physically or nervously, and who are not
+well adapted for child-bearing, but who still possess many excellent
+qualities, and they are always womanly. One may, perhaps, say that they
+are the pick of the women whom the average man would pass by. No doubt,
+this is often the reason why they are open to homosexual advances, but I
+do not think it is the sole reason. So far as they may be said to
+constitute a class, they seem to possess a genuine, though not precisely
+sexual, preference for women over men, and it is this coldness, rather
+than lack of charm, which often renders men rather indifferent to them.</p>
+
+<p>The actively inverted woman usually differs from the woman of the class
+just mentioned in one fairly essential character: a more or less distinct
+trace of masculinity. She may not be, and frequently is not, what would be
+called a &quot;mannish&quot; woman, for the latter may imitate men on grounds of
+taste and habit unconnected with sexual perversion, while in the inverted
+woman the masculine traits are part of an organic instinct which she by no
+means always wishes to accentuate. The inverted woman's masculine element
+may, in the least degree, consist only in the fact that she makes advances
+to the woman to whom she is <a name='2_Page_223'></a>attracted and treats all men in a cool,
+direct manner, which may not exclude comradeship, but which excludes every
+sexual relationship, whether of passion or merely of coquetry. Usually the
+inverted woman feels absolute indifference toward men, and not seldom
+repulsion. And this feeling, as a rule, is instinctively reciprocated by
+men. At the same time bisexual women are at least as common as bisexual
+men.</p>
+
+
+<div class='blkquot'><p><b>HISTORY XXXIV.&mdash;</b>Miss S., aged 38, living in a city of the United
+ States, a business woman of fine intelligence, prominent in
+ professional and literary circles. Her general health is good,
+ but she belongs to a family in which there is a marked
+ neuropathic element. She is of rather phlegmatic temperament,
+ well poised, always perfectly calm and self-possessed, rather
+ retiring in disposition, with gentle, dignified bearing.</p>
+
+<p> She says she cannot care for men, but that all her life has been
+ &quot;glorified and made beautiful by friendship with women,&quot; whom she
+ loves as a man loves women. Her character is, however, well
+ disciplined, and her friends are not aware of the nature of her
+ affections. She tries not to give all her love to one person, and
+ endeavors (as she herself expresses it) to use this &quot;gift of
+ loving&quot; as a stepping-stone to high mental and spiritual
+ attainments. She is described by one who has known her for
+ several years as &quot;having a high nature, and instincts unerringly
+ toward high things.&quot;</p>
+
+
+<p> <b>HISTORY XXXV.&mdash;</b>Miss B., artist, of German ancestry on the
+ paternal side. Among her brothers and sisters, one is of neurotic
+ temperament and another is inverted. She is herself healthy. She
+ has no repugnance to men, and would even like to try marriage, if
+ the union were not permanent, but she has seldom felt any sexual
+ attraction to a man. In one exceptional instance, early in life,
+ realizing that she was not adapted for heterosexual
+ relationships, she broke off the engagement she had formed. Much
+ later in life, she formed a more permanent relationship with a
+ man of congenial tastes.</p>
+
+<p> She is attracted to women of various kinds, though she recognizes
+ that there are some women to whom only men are attracted. Many
+ years since she had a friend to whom she was very strongly
+ attached, but the physical manifestations do not appear to have
+ become pronounced. After that her thoughts were much occupied by
+ several women to whom she made advances, which were not
+ encouraged to pass beyond ordinary friendship. In one case,
+ however, she formed an intimate relationship with a girl somewhat
+ younger than herself, and a very feminine personality, who
+ accepted Miss B.'s ardent love with <a name='2_Page_224'></a>pleasure, but in a passive
+ manner, and did not consider that the relationship would stand in
+ the way of her marrying, though she would on no account tell her
+ husband. The relationship for the first time aroused Miss B.'s
+ latent sexual emotions. She found sexual satisfaction in kissing
+ and embracing her friend's body, but there appeared to be no
+ orgasm. The relationship made a considerable change in her, and
+ rendered her radiant and happy.</p>
+
+<p> In her behavior toward men Miss B. reveals no sexual shyness. Men
+ are not usually attracted to her. There is nothing striking in
+ her appearance; her person and manners, though careless, are not
+ conspicuously man-like. She is fond of exercise and smokes a good
+ deal.</p>
+
+
+<p> <b>HISTORY XXXVI.&mdash;</b>Miss H., aged 30. Among her paternal relatives
+ there is a tendency to eccentricity and to nervous disease. Her
+ grandfather drank; her father was eccentric and hypochondriacal,
+ and suffered from obsessions. Her mother and mother's relatives
+ are entirely healthy, and normal in disposition.</p>
+
+<p> At the age of 4 she liked to see the nates of a little girl who
+ lived near. When she was about 6, the nurse-maid, sitting in the
+ fields, used to play with her own parts, and told her to do
+ likewise, saying it would make a baby come; she occasionally
+ touched herself in consequence, but without producing any effect
+ of any kind. When she was about 8 she used to see various
+ nurse-maids uncover their children's sexual parts and show them
+ to each other. She used to think about this when alone, and also
+ about whipping. She never cared to play with dolls, and in her
+ games always took the part of a man. Her first rudimentary
+ sex-feelings appeared at the age of 8 or 9, and were associated
+ with dreams of whipping and being whipped, which were most vivid
+ between the ages of 11 and 14, when they died away on the
+ appearance of affection for girls. She menstruated at 12.</p>
+
+<p> Her earliest affection, at the age of 13, was for a schoolfellow,
+ a graceful, coquettish girl with long golden hair and blue eyes.
+ Her affection displayed itself in performing all sorts of small
+ services for this girl, in constantly thinking about her, and in
+ feeling deliciously grateful for the smallest return. At the age
+ of 14 she had a similar passion for a girl cousin; she used to
+ look forward with ecstasy to her visits, and especially to the
+ rare occasions when the cousin slept with her; her excitement was
+ then so great that she could not sleep, but there was no
+ conscious sexual excitement. At the age of 15 or 16 she fell in
+ love with another cousin; her experiences with this girl were
+ full of delicious sensations; if the cousin only touched her
+ neck, a thrill went through her body which she now regards as
+ sexual. Again, at 17, she had an overwhelming, passionate
+ fascination for a schoolfellow, a pretty, commonplace girl, whom
+ she idealized and etherealized to an extravagant <a name='2_Page_225'></a>extent. This
+ passion was so violent that her health was, to some extent,
+ impaired; but it was purely unselfish, and there was nothing
+ sexual in it. On leaving school at the age of 19 she met a girl
+ of about the same age as herself, very womanly, but not much
+ attracted to men. This girl became very much attached to her, and
+ sought to gain her love. After some time Miss H. was attracted by
+ this love, partly from the sense of power it gave her, and an
+ intimate relation grew up. This relation became vaguely physical,
+ Miss H. taking the initiative, but her friend desiring such
+ relations and taking extreme pleasure in them; they used to touch
+ and kiss each other tenderly (especially on the <i>mons veneris</i>),
+ with equal ardor. They each experienced a strong pleasurable
+ feeling in doing this, and sexual erethism, but no orgasm, and it
+ does not appear that this ever occurred. Their general behavior
+ to each other was that of lovers, but they endeavored, as far as
+ possible, to hide this fact from the world. This relation lasted
+ for several years, and would have continued, had not Miss H.'s
+ friend, from religious and moral scruples, put an end to the
+ physical relationship. Miss H. had been very well and happy
+ during this relationship; the interference with it seems to have
+ exerted a disturbing influence, and also to have aroused her
+ sexual desires, though she was still scarcely conscious of their
+ real nature.</p>
+
+<p> Soon afterward another girl of exceedingly voluptuous type made
+ love to Miss H., to which the latter yielded, giving way to her
+ feelings as well as to her love of domination. She was afterward
+ ashamed of this episode, though the physical element in it had
+ remained vague and indefinite. Her remorse was so great that when
+ her friend, repenting her scruples, implored her to let their
+ relationship be on the same footing as of old, Miss H., in her
+ return, resisted every effort to restore the physical relation.
+ She kept to this resolution for some years, and sought to divert
+ her thoughts into intellectual channels. When she again formed an
+ intimate relationship it was with a congenial friend, and lasted
+ for several years.</p>
+
+<p> She has never masturbated. Occasionally, but very rarely, she has
+ had dreams of riding accompanied by pleasurable sexual emotions
+ (she cannot recall any actual experience to suggest this, though
+ fond of riding). She has never had any kind of sexual dreams
+ about a man; of late years she has occasionally had erotic dreams
+ about women.</p>
+
+<p> Her feeling toward men is friendly, but she has never had sexual
+ attraction toward a man. She likes them as good comrades, as men
+ like each other. She enjoys the society of men on account of
+ their intellectual attraction. She is herself very active in
+ social and intellectual work. Her feeling toward marriage has
+ always been one of repugnance. She can, however, imagine a man
+ whom she could love or marry.</p><a name='2_Page_226'></a>
+
+<p> She is attracted to womanly women, sincere, reserved, pure, but
+ courageous in character. She is not attracted to intellectual
+ women, but at the same time cannot endure silly women. The
+ physical qualities that attract her most are not so much beauty
+ of face as a graceful, but not too slender, body with beautiful
+ curves. The women she is drawn to are usually somewhat younger
+ than herself. Women are much attracted to her, and without any
+ effort on her part. She likes to take the active part and
+ protecting r&ocirc;le with them. She is herself energetic in character,
+ and with a somewhat neurotic temperament.</p>
+
+<p> She finds sexual satisfaction in tenderly touching, caressing,
+ and kissing the loved one's body. (There is no <i>cunnilinctus</i>,
+ which she regards with abhorrence.) She feels more tenderness
+ than passion. There is a high degree of sexual erethism when
+ kissing, but orgasm is rare and is produced by lying on the
+ friend or by the friend lying on her, without any special
+ contact. She likes being herself kissed, but not so much as
+ taking the active part.</p>
+
+<p> She believes that homosexual love is morally right when it is
+ really part of a person's nature, and provided that the nature of
+ homosexual love is always made plain to the object of such
+ affection. She does not approve of it as a mere makeshift, or
+ expression of sensuality, in normal women. She has sometimes
+ resisted the sexual expression of her feelings, once for years at
+ a time, but always in vain. The effect on her of loving women is
+ distinctly good, she asserts, both spiritually and physically,
+ while repression leads to morbidity and hysteria. She has
+ suffered much from neurasthenia at various periods, but under
+ appropriate treatment it has slowly diminished. The inverted
+ instinct is too deeply rooted to eradicate, but it is well under
+ control.</p>
+
+
+<p> <b>HISTORY XXXVII.&mdash;</b>Miss M., the daughter of English parents (both
+ musicians), who were both of what is described as &quot;intense&quot;
+ temperament, and there is a neurotic element in the family,
+ though no history of insanity or alcoholism, and she is herself
+ free from nervous disease. At birth she was very small. In a
+ portrait taken at the age of 4 the nose, mouth, and ears are
+ abnormally large, and she wears a little boy's hat. As a child
+ she did not care for dolls or for pretty clothes, and often
+ wondered why other children found so much pleasure in them. &quot;As
+ far back as my memory goes,&quot; she writes, &quot;I cannot recall a time
+ when I was not different from other children. I felt bored when
+ other little girls came to play with me, though I was never rough
+ or boisterous in my sports.&quot; Sewing was distasteful to her. Still
+ she cared little more for the pastimes of boys, and found her
+ favorite amusement in reading, especially adventures and
+ fairy-tales. She was always quiet, timid, and self-conscious. The
+ instinct first made its appearance in the latter part of her
+ eighth or the first part of her ninth year. She <a name='2_Page_227'></a>was strongly
+ attracted by the face of a teacher who used to appear at a
+ side-window on the second floor of the school-building and ring a
+ bell to summon the children to their classes. The teacher's face
+ seemed very beautiful, but sad, and she thought about her
+ continually, though not coming in personal contact with, her. A
+ year later this teacher was married and left the school, and the
+ impression gradually faded away. &quot;There was no consciousness of
+ sex at this time,&quot; she wrote; &quot;no knowledge of sexual matters or
+ practices, and the feelings evoked were feelings of pity and
+ compassion and tenderness for a person who seemed to be very sad
+ and very much depressed. It is this quality or combination of
+ qualities which has always made the appeal in my own case. I may
+ go on for years in comparative peace, when something may happen,
+ in spite of my busy practical life, to call it all out.&quot; The next
+ feelings were experienced when, she was about 11 years of age. A
+ young lady came to visit a next-door neighbor, and made so
+ profound an impression on the child that she was ridiculed by her
+ playmates for preferring to sit in a dark corner on the
+ lawn&mdash;where she might watch this young lady&mdash;rather than to play
+ games. Being a sensitive child, after this experience she was
+ careful not to reveal her feelings to anyone. She felt
+ instinctively that in this she was different from others. Her
+ sense of beauty developed early, but there was always an
+ indefinable feeling of melancholy associated with it. The
+ twilight, a dark night when the stars shone brightly; these had a
+ very depressing effect upon her, but possessed a strong
+ attraction nevertheless, and pictures appealed to her. At the age
+ of 12 she fell in love with a schoolmate, two years older than
+ herself, who was absorbed in the boys and never suspected this
+ affection; she wept bitterly because they could not be confirmed
+ at the same time, but feared to appear undignified and
+ sentimental by revealing her feelings. The face of this friend
+ reminded her of one of Dolce's Madonnas which she loved. Later
+ on, at the age of 16, she loved another friend very dearly and
+ devoted herself to her care. There was a tinge of masculinity
+ among the women of this friend's family, but it is not clear if
+ she can be termed inverted. This was the happiest period of Miss
+ M.'s life. Upon the death of this friend, who had long been in
+ ill health, eight years afterward, she resolved never to let her
+ heart go out to anyone again.</p>
+
+<p> Specific physical gratification plays no part in these
+ relationships. The physical sexual feelings began to assert
+ themselves at puberty, but not in association with her ideal
+ emotions. &quot;In that connection,&quot; she writes, &quot;I would have
+ considered such things a sacrilege. I fought them and in a
+ measure successfully. The practice of self-indulgence which might
+ have become a daily habit was only occasional. Her image evoked
+ at such times drove away such feelings, for which I felt <a name='2_Page_228'></a>a
+ repugnance, much preferring the romantic ideal feelings. In this
+ way, quite unconscious of the fact that I was at all different
+ from, any other person, I contrived to train myself to suppress
+ or at least to dominate my physical sensations when they arose.
+ That is the reason why friendship and love have always seemed
+ such holy and beautiful things to me. I have never connected the
+ two sets of feelings. I think I am as strongly sexed as anyone,
+ but I am able to hold a friend in my arms and experience deep
+ comfort and peace without having even a hint of physical sexual
+ feeling. Sexual expression may be quite necessary at certain
+ times and right under certain conditions, but I am convinced that
+ free expression of affection along sentimental channels will do
+ much to minimize the necessity for it along specifically sexual
+ channels. I have gone three months without the physical outlet.
+ The only time I was ever on the verge of nervous prostration was
+ after having suppressed the instinct for ten months. The other
+ feelings, which I do not consider as sexual feelings at all, so
+ fill my life in every department&mdash;love, literature, poetry,
+ music, professional and philanthropic activities&mdash;that I am able
+ to let the physical take care of itself. When the physical
+ sensations come, it is usually when I am not thinking of a loved
+ one at all. I could dissipate them by raising my thought to that
+ spiritual friendship. I do not know if this was right and wise. I
+ know it is what occurred. It seems a good thing to practise some
+ sort of inhibition of the centers and acquire this kind of
+ domination. One bad result, however, was that I suffered much at
+ times from the physical sensations, and felt horribly depressed
+ and wretched whenever they seemed to get the better of me.&quot;</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I have been able,&quot; she writes, &quot;successfully to master the
+ desire for a more perfect and complete expression of my feelings,
+ and I have done so without serious detriment to my health.&quot; &quot;I
+ love few people,&quot; she writes again, &quot;but in these instances when
+ I have permitted my heart to go out to a friend I have always
+ experienced most exalted feelings, and have been made better by
+ them morally, mentally, and spiritually. Love is with me a
+ religion.&quot;</p>
+
+<p> With regard to her attitude toward the other sex, she writes: &quot;I
+ have never felt a dislike for men, but have good comrades among
+ them. During my childhood I associated with both girls and boys,
+ enjoying them all, but wondering why the girls cared to flirt
+ with boys. Later in life I have had other friendships with men,
+ some of whom cared for me, much to my regret, for, naturally, I
+ do not care to marry.&quot;</p>
+
+<p> She is a musician, and herself attributes her nature in part to
+ artistic temperament. She is of good intelligence, and shows
+ remarkable talent for various branches of physical science. She
+ is about 5 feet<a name='2_Page_229'></a> 4 inches in height, and her features are rather
+ large. The pelvic measurements are normal, and the external
+ sexual organs are fairly normal in most respects, though somewhat
+ small. At a period ten years subsequent to the date of this
+ history, further examination, under anesthetics, by a
+ gynecologist, showed no traces of ovary on one side. The general
+ conformation of the body is feminine. But with arms, palms up,
+ extended in front of her with inner sides of hands touching, she
+ cannot bring the inner sides of forearms together, as nearly
+ every woman can, showing that the feminine angle of arm is lost.</p>
+
+<p> She is left-handed and shows a better development throughout on
+ the left side. She is quiet and dignified, but has many boyish
+ tricks of manner and speech which seem to be instinctive; she
+ tries to watch herself continually, however, in order to avoid
+ them, affecting feminine ways and feminine interests, but always
+ being conscious of an effort in so doing.</p>
+
+<p> Miss M. can see nothing wrong in her feelings; and, until, at the
+ age of 28, she came across the translation of Krafft-Ebing's
+ book, she had no idea &quot;that feelings like mine were 'under the
+ ban of society' as he puts it, or were considered unnatural and
+ depraved.&quot; She would like to help to bring light on the subject
+ and to lift the shadow from other lives. &quot;I emphatically
+ protest,&quot; she says, &quot;against the uselessness and the inhumanity
+ of attempts to 'cure' inverts. I am quite sure they have perfect
+ right to live in freedom and happiness as long as they live
+ unselfish lives. One must bear in mind that it is the soul that
+ needs to be satisfied, and not merely the senses.&quot;</p>
+
+
+<p> <b>HISTORY XXXVIII.&mdash;</b>Miss V., aged 35. Throughout early life up to
+ adult age she was a mystery to herself, and morbidly conscious of
+ some fundamental difference between herself and other people.
+ There was no one she could speak to about this peculiarity. In
+ the effort to conquer it, or to ignore it, she became a hard
+ student and has attained success in the profession she adopted. A
+ few years ago she came across a book on sexual inversion which
+ proved to be a complete revelation to her of her own nature, and,
+ by showing her that she was not an anomaly to be regarded with
+ repulsion, brought her comfort and peace. She is willing that her
+ experiences should be published for the sake of other women who
+ may be suffering as in the past she has suffered.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I am a teacher in a college for women. I am 34 years old and of
+ medium size. Up to the age of 30 I looked much younger, and since
+ older, than my age. Until 21 I had a strikingly child-like
+ appearance. My physique has nothing masculine in it that I am
+ aware of; but I am conscious that my walk is mannish, and I have
+ very frequently been told that I do things&mdash;such as
+ sewing,&mdash;'just like a man.' My voice is quite low but not coarse.
+ I dislike household work, but am fond of <a name='2_Page_230'></a>sports, gardening, etc.
+ When so young that I cannot remember it, I learned to whistle, a
+ practice at which I am still expert. When a young girl, I learned
+ to smoke, and should still enjoy it.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;Several men have been good friends of mine, but very few
+ suitors. I scarcely ever feel at ease with a man; but women I
+ understand and can nearly always make my friends.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I am of Scotch-Irish descent. My father's family were
+ respectable, prosperous, religious people; my mother's family
+ only semi-respectable, hard livers, shrewd, but not intelligent,
+ industrious and money-getting, but fond of drinking and
+ carousing. There were many illegitimates among them. Both
+ grandmothers, though of little education, were unusual women. Of
+ my four maternal uncles, three drank heavily.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;When 43, my mother gave birth to me, the youngest of 8 children.
+ Of those who grew to adult years, 2 seem quite normal sexually; 1
+ is exceedingly erratic, entirely unprincipled, has been a thief
+ and a forger, is a probable bigamist, and has betrayed several
+ respectable women. Aside from his having inordinate desire, I
+ know of no sexual abnormality. Another brother, married and a
+ father, as a boy was much given to infatuations for men. I fancy
+ this never went beyond infatuation and of late years has not been
+ noticeable. A third brother, single, though much courted by women
+ on account of his good looks and personal charm, is wholly
+ unresponsive, has no gallantry, nor was ever, to my knowledge, a
+ suitor. He is, however, fond of the society of women, especially
+ those older than he. He has a somewhat effeminate voice and walk.
+ Though he has begun of late years to smoke and drink a little,
+ these habits sit rather oddly upon him. When a child, one of his
+ favorite make-believe games was to pretend that he was a famous
+ woman singer. At school he was always found hanging around the
+ older girls.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;As a child I loved to stay in the fields, refused to wear a
+ sunbonnet, used to pretend I was a boy, climbed trees, and played
+ ball. I liked to play with dolls, but I did not fondle them, or
+ even make them dresses. When my hair was clipped, I was delighted
+ and made everyone call me 'John.' I used to like to wear a man's
+ broad-brimmed hat and make corn-cob pipes. I was very fond of my
+ father and tried to imitate him as much as possible. Where
+ animals were concerned, I was entirely fearless.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I think I was not a sexually precocious child, though I seem to
+ have always known in a dim way that there were two sexes. Very
+ early I had a sense of shame at having my body exposed; I
+ remember on one occasion I could not be persuaded to undress
+ before a young girl visitor. At that time I must have been about
+ 3. When I was 4 a neighbor who had often petted me took me on his
+ lap and clasped my <a name='2_Page_231'></a>hand around his penis. Though he was
+ interrupted in a moment, this made a lasting impression on me. I
+ had no physical sensation nor did I have any conception of the
+ significance of the act. Yet I had a slight feeling of repulsion,
+ and I must have dimly felt that it was wrong, for I did not tell
+ my mother. I was not accustomed to confide in her, for, though
+ truthful, I was secretive.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;At the age of 5 I commenced to attend a district school. I
+ remember that on my first day I was Greatly attracted by a little
+ girl who wore a bright-red dress.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;My first definite knowledge of sex came in this way: I was
+ attending Sabbath school and had become ambitious to read the
+ Bible through. I had gotten as far as the account of the birth of
+ Esau and Jacob, which aroused my curiosity. So I asked my mother
+ the meaning of some word in the passage. She seemed embarrassed
+ and evaded my question. This attitude stimulated my curiosity
+ further, and I re-read the chapter until I understood it pretty
+ well. Later I was further enlightened by girl playmates. I fancy
+ I enjoyed listening to their talk and repeating what I knew on
+ account of the mystery and secrecy with which sex subjects are
+ surrounded rather than any sensual delight.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I cannot recall any act of mine growing directly from sexual
+ feeling until I was 10 years old. Several other little girls and
+ myself two or three times exposed private parts of our bodies to
+ each other. In one instance, at least, I was the instigator. This
+ act gave me some pleasure, though no distinct physical sensation.
+ One incident I recall that happened when I was about 10. A girl
+ cousin and myself had been playing 'house' together. I do not
+ recall what immediately led to it, but we began to address each
+ other as boys and tried to urinate through long tubes of some
+ sort. I also recall feeling a vague interest in this process in
+ animals, and observing them closely in the act.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;From this time until I was about 14 I grew ruder, more
+ boisterous and uncontrollable. Prior to this I had been a quite
+ tractable child. When 12 I became interested in a boy in my grade
+ at school, and tried to attract him, but failed. Once at a
+ children's party where we were playing kissing games I tried to
+ get him to kiss me, but he was unresponsive. I do not recall
+ bothering myself about him after that. A year later I had a boy
+ chum about whom my schoolmaster teased me. I thought this
+ ridiculous. At the age of 13 I menstruated, a fact that caused me
+ shame and anger. Gradually I grew to feel myself peculiar, why, I
+ cannot explain. I did not seem to myself to be like other girls
+ of my acquaintance. I adopted, as a defense, a brusque and
+ defiant air. I spent a good deal of time playing alone in our
+ backyard, where I made a pair of stilts, practised rope-walking,
+ and such things. At school<a name='2_Page_232'></a> I felt I was not liked by the nicer
+ girls and began to associate with girls whom I now believe were
+ immoral, but whom I then supposed did nothing worse than talk in
+ an obscene manner. I copied their conversation and grew more
+ reckless and uncontrollable. The principal of the high school I
+ was attending, I learned afterward, said I was the hardest pupil
+ to control she had ever had. About this time I read a book where
+ a girl was represented as saying she had a 'boy's soul in a
+ girl's body.' The applicability of this to myself struck me at
+ once, and I read the sentence to my mother who disgusted me by
+ appearing shocked.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;During this period I began to fall in love,&mdash;a practice which
+ clung to me until I was nearly 30 years old. I recall various
+ older women with whom I became much enamored, and one man. Of
+ these there was only one with whom I became acquainted well
+ enough to show any affection; another was a teacher, and another
+ was a young married woman at whom I used to gaze ardently during
+ an entire church service. Toward all my women teachers I had a
+ somewhat sentimental attitude. They stimulated me, while the men
+ gave me a wholly impersonal feeling. This abnormal sentimentality
+ may have been caused, or at least was increased, by the reading
+ of novels, some of a highly voluptuous nature. I began to read
+ novels at 7, and from 11 to 14 I absorbed a great many
+ undesirable ones. This lead to my picturing my future with a
+ lover, fancying myself in romantic scenes and being caressed and
+ embraced. I had always supposed I should marry. When about 5 I
+ decided that when I grew up I would marry a certain young man who
+ used to come to our house. Several years later he married, to my
+ real disappointment. I had no affection for him, but merely
+ thought he would make a desirable husband.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;During my unhappy adolescence I heard that a former playmate was
+ going to visit at my home. I began to look forward to the visit
+ with much eagerness and at her arrival was much excited. I wished
+ to stay alone with her and to caress her, and when we slept
+ together I pressed my body against her in a sensual manner, which
+ act she permitted, but without passion. I was greatly excited and
+ could scarcely sleep. This was the first time I had acted in such
+ a way, and after she left I felt shame and dislike for her. At
+ future meetings there was never the least sensuality; we never
+ referred to the first visit and are still friends, though not
+ intimate.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;A diary which I kept during my fourteenth and fifteenth years is
+ filled with romantic sentiments and endearing terms applied
+ successively to three girls of my own age. I had but a speaking
+ acquaintance with them, but I was strongly infatuated with all.
+ One boy was also the object of adoration.</p><a name='2_Page_233'></a>
+
+<p> &quot;During my thirteenth year I became for a time very religious and
+ devoted to religious exercises. This passed and by my fourteenth
+ year I had become heretical, but was still keenly sensitive to
+ religious influences.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;When barely 16 I slept one night with a woman of low morals. She
+ acted toward me in a sensual manner and aroused my sexual
+ feelings. I felt at the time that this was a sin, but I was
+ carried away by passion. Afterward I hated this woman and
+ despised myself.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I then went away to a co-educational boarding school. Here for
+ the first time I became happy. A girl of my own age, of fine
+ character and noticeable refinement, fell in love with me and
+ caused me to reciprocate. On retrospection I believe this to have
+ been a genuine and beautiful love on both sides. After a few
+ months, however, our relation, at my initiative and against my
+ friend's will, became a physical one. We expressed our affection
+ by mutual caresses, close embraces and lying on each other's
+ bodies. I sometimes touched her sexual organs sensually. All this
+ contact gave me exquisite thrills. After three years we had a
+ misunderstanding and separated. I was greatly grieved and
+ troubled for many years, and came to regret greatly the physical
+ relationship that had existed between us. My friend at length
+ fell in love and married. I had several other slighter
+ infatuations for women, was courted by several men to whom I
+ remained cold and bored except in one instance, where I was
+ somewhat touched, and finally found a lasting friendship with a
+ woman who had fallen deeply in love with me in her school days
+ and had never been able to care for any one else. She is a woman
+ of considerable literary talent and of good general ability and
+ high ideals. She is usually much liked by men. Her love for me is
+ the most real thing in the world for me, and seems the most
+ permanent. At first my feeling for her was almost purely
+ physical, although there were no sexual relations. I hated this
+ feeling and have succeeded in overcoming it pretty largely. At
+ times after long separations we have embraced with great passion,
+ at least on my part. This has always had a bad physical effect on
+ me. At present, however, it very rarely occurs. We both consider
+ sexual feelings degrading and deleterious to real love. Whether
+ at any time we have had complete physical satisfaction or
+ gratification, I hardly know. I have experienced very keen
+ physical pleasure, mingled with what I took to be great mental
+ exaltation and quickening of the emotions. This condition was
+ brought about by close contact with the body of my friend,
+ usually by lying upon it. But if by 'gratification' it is meant
+ that desire, having been completely satisfied, ceases
+ temporarily, I think I have never had that experience. If I did,
+ it was when I was about 18 when I lived with a girl friend in
+ intimate relations. Of late years, at any rate, it has never
+ happened <a name='2_Page_234'></a>to me, and an embrace, however close, always leaves me
+ with a desire for a closer union, both physical and spiritual. So
+ a few years since, I came to the conclusion that it was
+ impossible to obtain physical satisfaction through the woman I
+ loved. I came to this conclusion because of the bad physical
+ effects of contact. My sexual organs became highly sensitive and
+ inflamed and I suffered pain from the inflammation and resulting
+ leucorrhea. Should I allow myself to indulge in caresses this
+ condition would return. My friend, fortunately, though very
+ affectionate and demonstrative toward me, has very little sexual
+ passion. The idea that our relationship is based upon it is very
+ repugnant to her. I was at one time, a few years since, much
+ discouraged and almost hopeless of being able to overcome my
+ appetite, and I decided that we could not associate unless I
+ succeeded. At present, with help, I have very largely succeeded
+ in living with my friend on a basis of normal, though
+ affectionate and tender, companionship. I have been helped more,
+ and have learned more, through this companionship, than through
+ anything else. The keen pleasure that I have felt when in
+ responsive contact I never experienced in masturbation. So far as
+ I remember it never took place till I was well along in my 'teens
+ and was never an habitual practice, except the first summer I was
+ separated from a school friend whom I loved. Thoughts of her
+ aroused feelings which I attempted to satisfy in this way, but
+ the entire sensuality of the act soon led me to refrain and to
+ see that that was not what I wanted.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;A peculiar incident that might have some significance occurred
+ to me about five years ago. I was sitting in a small room where a
+ seminar was being conducted. The leader of the discussion was a
+ man about 50, whom I looked up to on account of his attainments
+ and respected as a man, though I knew him socially very slightly.
+ I had lost a night's sleep from toothache and was feeling
+ nervous. I was giving my entire attention to the subject in hand,
+ when suddenly I felt a very strong physical compulsion toward
+ that man. I did not know what I was going to do, but I felt on
+ the point of losing all control of myself. I was afraid to leave,
+ for fear the slightest movement would throw me into a panic. The
+ attraction was entirely physical and like nothing I had felt
+ before. And I had a strange feeling that its cause was in the man
+ himself; that he was willing it; I was like a spectator. It was
+ some moments before the assemblage broke up, when my 'possession'
+ completely disappeared and never recurred.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;Regarding dreams, I will say that not until the past year or two
+ have I been conscious of having clear-cut dreams with definite
+ happenings. They seemed usually to leave only vague impressions,
+ such as a feeling that I had been riding horseback, or trying to
+ perform some hard task. Sexual dreams I do not recall having had
+ for several years, <a name='2_Page_235'></a>except that occasionally I am awakened by a
+ feeling of uncomfortable sexual desire, which seems usually
+ caused by a need to urinate. Between the ages of 17 and 22,
+ approximately, I frequently, perhaps several times a month, would
+ have vague sexual dreams. These always, I think, occurred when I
+ happened to be sleeping with someone whom, in my dream, I would
+ mistake for my intimate friend, and would awaken myself by
+ embracing my bedfellow with sometimes a slight, sometimes
+ considerable degree of passion. I have finally arrived at some
+ understanding of my own temperament, and am no longer miserable
+ and melancholy. I regret that I am not a man, because I could
+ then have a home and children.&quot;</p>
+
+
+<p> <b>HISTORY XXXIX.&mdash;</b>Miss D., actively engaged in the practice of her
+ profession, aged 40. Heredity good, nervous system sound, general
+ health on the whole satisfactory. Development feminine but manner
+ and movements somewhat boyish. Menstruation scanty and painless.
+ Hips normal, nates small, sexual organs showing some
+ approximation toward infantile type with large labia minora and
+ probably small vagina. Tendency to development of hair on body
+ and especially lower limbs. The narrative is given in her own
+ words:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p> &quot;Ever since I can remember anything at all I could never think of
+ myself as a girl and I was in perpetual trouble, with this as the
+ real reason. When I was 5 or 6 years old I began to say to myself
+ that, whatever anyone said, if I was not a boy at any rate I was
+ not a girl. This has been my unchanged conviction all through my
+ life.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;When I was little, nothing ever made me doubt it, in spite of
+ external appearance. I regarded the conformation of my body as a
+ mysterious accident. I could not see why it should have anything
+ to do with the matter. The things that really affected the
+ question were my own likes and dislikes, and the fact that I was
+ not allowed to follow them. I was to like the things which
+ belonged to me as a girl,&mdash;frocks and toys and games which I did
+ not like at all. I fancy I was more strongly 'boyish' than the
+ ordinary little boy. When I could only crawl my absorbing
+ interest was hammers and carpet-nails. Before I could walk I
+ begged to be put on horses' backs, so that I seem to have been
+ born with the love of tools and animals which has never left me.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I did not play with dolls, though my little sister did. I was
+ often reproached for not playing her games. I always chose boys'
+ toys,&mdash;tops and guns and horses; I hated being kept indoors and
+ was always longing to go out. By the time I was 7 it seemed to me
+ that everything I liked was called wrong for a girl. I left off
+ telling my elders what I did like. They confused and wearied me
+ by their talk of boys and girls. I did not believe them and could
+ hardly imagine that they believed themselves. By the time I was 8
+ or 9 I used to wonder whether <a name='2_Page_236'></a>they were dupes, or liars, or
+ hypocrites, or all three. I never believed or trusted a grown
+ person in consequence. I led my younger brothers in everything. I
+ was not at all a happy little child and often cried and was made
+ irritable; I was so confused by the talk, about boys and girls. I
+ was held up as an evil example to other little girls who
+ virtuously despised me.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;When I was about 9 years old I went to a day school and began to
+ have a better time. From 9 to 13 I practically shaped my own
+ life. I learned very little at school, and openly hated it, but I
+ read a great deal at home and got plenty of ideas. I lived,
+ however, mainly out of doors whenever I could get out. I spent
+ all my pocket money on tools, rabbits, pigeons and many other
+ animals. I became an ardent pigeon-catcher, not to say thief,
+ though I did not knowingly steal.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;My brothers were as devoted to the animals as I was. The men
+ were supposed to look after them, but we alone did so. We
+ observed, mated, separated, and bred them with considerable
+ skill. We had no language to express ourselves, but one of our
+ own. We were absolutely innocent, and sweetly sympathetic with
+ every beast. I don't think we ever connected their affairs with
+ those of human beings, but as I do not remember the time when I
+ did not know all about the actual facts of sex and reproduction,
+ I presume I learned it all in that way, and life never had any
+ surprises for me in that direction. Though I saw many sights that
+ a child should not have seen, while running about wild, I never
+ gave them a thought; all animals great and small from rabbits to
+ men had the same customs, all natural and right. My initiation
+ here was, in my eyes, as nearly perfect as a child's should be. I
+ never asked grown people questions. I thought all those in charge
+ of me coarse and untruthful and I disliked all ugly things and
+ suggestions.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;Every half-holiday I went out with the boys from my brothers'
+ school. They always liked me to play with them, and, though not
+ pleasant-tongued boys, were always civil and polite to me. I
+ organized games and fortifications that they would never have
+ imagined for themselves, led storming parties, and instituted
+ some rather dangerous games of a fighting kind. I taught my
+ brothers; to throw stones. Sometimes I led adventures such as
+ breaking into empty houses. I liked being out after dark.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;In the winter I made and rigged boats and went sailing them, and
+ I went rafting and pole-leaping. I became a very good jumper and
+ climber, could go up a rope, bowl overhand, throw like a boy, and
+ whistle three different ways. I collected beetles and butterflies
+ and went shrimping and learned to fish. I had very little money
+ to spend, but I picked things up and I made all traps, nets,
+ cages, etc., myself.<a name='2_Page_237'></a> I learned from every working-man, I could
+ get hold of the use of all ordinary carpenters' tools, and how to
+ weld hot iron, pave, lay bricks and turf, and so on.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;When I was about 11 my parents got more mortified at my behavior
+ and perpetually threatened me with a boarding-school. I was told
+ for months how it would take the nonsense out of me&mdash;'shape me,'
+ 'turn me into a young lady.' My going was finally announced to me
+ as a punishment to me for being what I was.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;Certainly, the horror of going to this school and the cruel and
+ unsympathetic way that I was sent there gave me a shock that I
+ never got over. The only thing that reconciled me to going was my
+ intense indignation with those who sent me. I appealed to be
+ allowed to learn Latin and boys' subjects, but was laughed at.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I was so helpless that I knew I could not run away without being
+ caught, or I would have run away anywhere from home and school. I
+ never cried or fretted, but burnt with anger and went like a
+ trapped rabbit.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;In no words can I describe the severity of the nervous shock, or
+ the suffering of my first year at school. The school was noted
+ for its severity and I heard that at one period the elder girls
+ ran away so often that they wore a uniform dress. I knew two who
+ had run away. The teachers in my time were ignorant,
+ self-indulgent women who cared nothing for the girls or their
+ education and made much money out of them. There was a suspicious
+ reformatory atmosphere, and my money was taken from me and my
+ letters read.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I was intensely shy. I hated the other girls. There were no
+ refinements anywhere; I had no privacy in my room, which was
+ always overcrowded; we had no hot water, no baths, improper food,
+ and no education. We were not allowed to wear enough clean linen,
+ and for five years I never felt clean.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I never had one moment to myself, was not allowed to read
+ anything, had even not enough lesson books, was taught nothing to
+ speak of except a little inferior music and drawing. I never got
+ enough exercise, and was always tired and dull, and could not
+ keep my digestion in order. My pride and self-respect were
+ degraded in innumerable ways, I suffered agonies of disgust, and
+ the whole thing was a dreary penal servitude.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I did not complain. I made friends with a few of the girls. Some
+ of the older girls were attracted to me. Some talked of men and
+ love affairs to me, but I was not greatly interested. No one ever
+ spoke of any other matters of sex to me or in my hearing, but
+ most of the girls were shy with me and I with them.</p><a name='2_Page_238'></a>
+
+<p> &quot;In about two years' time the teachers got to like me and thought
+ me one of their nicest girls. I certainly influenced them and got
+ them to allow the girls more privileges.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I lay great stress upon the physical privations and disgust that
+ I felt during these years. The mental starvation was not quite so
+ great because it was impossible for them to crush my mind as they
+ did my body. That it all materially aided to arrest the
+ development of my body I am certain.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;It is difficult to estimate sexual influences of which as a
+ child I was practically unaware. I certainly admired the
+ liveliest and cleverest girls and made friends with them and
+ disliked the common, lumpy, uneducated type that made two-thirds
+ of my companions. The lively girls liked me, and I made several
+ nice friends whom I have kept ever since. One girl of about 15
+ took a violent liking for me and figuratively speaking licked the
+ dust from my shoes. I would never take any notice of her. When I
+ was nearly 16 one of my teachers began to notice me and be very
+ kind to me. She was twenty years older than I was. She seemed to
+ pity my loneliness and took me out for walks and sketching, and
+ encouraged me to talk and think. It was the first time in my life
+ that anyone had ever sympathized with me or tried to understand
+ me and it was a most beautiful thing to me. I felt like an orphan
+ child who had suddenly acquired a mother, and through her I began
+ to feel less antagonistic to grown people and to feel the first
+ respect I had ever felt for what they said. She petted me into a
+ state of comparative docility and made the other teachers like
+ and trust me. My love for her was perfectly pure, and I thought
+ of her's as simply maternal. She never roused the least feeling
+ in me that I can think of as sexual. I liked her to touch me and
+ she sometimes held me in her arms or let me sit on her lap. At
+ bedtime she used to come and say good-night and kiss me upon the
+ mouth. I think now that what she did was injudicious to a degree,
+ and I wish I could believe it was as purely unselfish and kind as
+ it seemed to me then. After I had left school I wrote to her and
+ visited her during a few years. Once she wrote to me that if I
+ could give her employment she would come and live with me. Once
+ when she was ill with neurasthenia her friends asked me to go to
+ the seaside with her, which I did. Here she behaved in an
+ extraordinary way, becoming violently jealous over me with
+ another elderly friend of mine who was there. I could hardly
+ believe my senses and was so astonished and disgusted that I
+ never went near her again. She also accused me of not being
+ 'loyal' to her; to this day I have no idea what she meant. She
+ then wrote and asked me what was wrong between us, and I replied
+ that after the words she had had with me my confidence in her was
+ at an end. It gave me no particular pang as I had by this time
+ outgrown <a name='2_Page_239'></a>the simple gratitude of my childish days and not
+ replaced it by any stronger feeling. All my life I have had the
+ profoundest repugnance to having any 'words' with other women.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I was much less interested in sex matters than other children of
+ my age. I was altogether less precocious, though I knew more, I
+ imagine, than other girls. Nevertheless, by the time I was 15
+ social matters had begun to interest me greatly. It is difficult
+ to say how this happened, as I was forbidden all books and
+ newspapers (except in my holidays when I had generally a reading
+ orgy, though not the books I needed or wanted). I had abundant
+ opportunities for speculation, but no materials for any
+ profitable thinking.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;Dreaming was forced upon me. I dreamed fairy-tales by night and
+ social dreams by day. In the nightdreams, sometimes in the
+ day-dreams, I was always the prince or the pirate, rescuing
+ beauty in distress, or killing the unworthy. I had one dream
+ which I dreamed over and over again and enjoyed and still
+ sometimes dream. In this I was always hunting and fighting, often
+ in the dark; there was usually a woman or a princess, whom I
+ admired, somewhere in the background, but I have never really
+ seen her. Sometimes I was a stowaway on board ship or an Indian
+ hunter or a backwoodsman making a log-cabin for my wife or rather
+ some companion. My daythoughts were not about the women round
+ about me, or even about the one who was so kind to me; they were
+ almost impersonal. I went on, at any rate, from myself to what I
+ thought the really ideal and built up a very beautiful vision of
+ solid human friendship in which there was everything that was
+ strong and wholesome on either side, but very little of sex. To
+ imagine this in its fullness I had to imagine all social, family,
+ and educational conditions vastly different from anything I had
+ come across. From this my thoughts ran largely on social matters.
+ In whatever direction my thoughts ran I always surveyed them from
+ the point of view of a boy. I was trying to wait patiently till I
+ could escape from slavery and starvation, and trying to keep the
+ open mind I have spoken of, though I never opened a book of
+ poetry, or a novel, or a history, but I slipped naturally back
+ into my non-girl's attitude and read it through my own eyes. All
+ my surface-life was a sham, and only through books, which were
+ few, did I ever see the world naturally. A consideration of
+ social matters led me to feel very sorry for women, whom I
+ regarded as made by a deliberate process of manufacture into the
+ fools I thought they were, and by the same process that I myself
+ was being made one. I felt more and more that men were to be
+ envied and women pitied. I lay stress on this for it started in
+ me a deliberate interest in women as women. I began to feel
+ protective and kindly toward women and children and to excuse
+ women from their responsibility for calamities <a name='2_Page_240'></a>such as my
+ school-career. I never imagined that men required, or would have
+ thanked me for, any sort of sympathy. But it came about in these
+ ways, and without the least help that I can trace, that by the
+ time I was 19 years of age I was keenly interested in all kinds
+ of questions: pity for downtrodden women, suffrage questions,
+ marriage laws, questions of liberty, freedom of thought, care of
+ the poor, views of Nature and Man and God. All these things
+ filled my mind to the exclusion of individual men and women. As
+ soon as I left school I made a headlong plunge into books where
+ these things were treated; I had the answers to everything to
+ find after a long period of enforced starvation. I had to work
+ for my knowledge. No books or ideas came near me but what I went
+ in search of. Another thing that helped me to take an expansive
+ view of life at this time was my intense love of Nature. All
+ birds and animals affected me by their beauty and grace, and I
+ have always kept a profound sympathy with them as well as some
+ subtle understanding which enables me to tame them, at times
+ remarkably. I not only loved all other creatures, but I believed
+ that men and women were the most beautiful things in the universe
+ and I would rather look at them (unclothed) than on any other
+ thing, as my greatest pleasure. I was prepared to like them
+ because they were beautiful. When the time came for me to leave
+ school I rather dreaded it, chiefly because I dreaded my life at
+ home. I had a great longing at this time to run away and try my
+ fortune anywhere; possibly if I had been stronger I might have
+ done so. But I was in very poor health through the physical
+ crushing I had had, and in very poor spirits through this and my
+ mental repression. I still knew myself a prisoner and I was
+ bitterly disappointed and ashamed at having no education. I
+ afterward had myself taught arithmetic and other things.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;The next period of my life which covered about six years was not
+ less important to my development, and was a time of extreme
+ misery to me. It found me, on leaving school, almost a child.
+ This time between 18 and 24 should, I think, count as my proper
+ period of puberty, which probably in most children occupies the
+ end years of their school-life.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;It was at this time that I began to make a good many friends of
+ my own and to become aware of psychical and sexual attractions. I
+ had never come across any theories on the subject, but I decided
+ that I must belong to a third sex of some kind. I used to wonder
+ if I was like the neuter bees! I knew physical and psychical sex
+ feeling and yet I seemed to know it quite otherwise from other
+ men and women. I asked myself if I could endure living a woman's
+ life, bearing children and doing my duty by them. I asked myself
+ what hiatus there could be between my bodily structure and my
+ feelings, and also what was the <a name='2_Page_241'></a>meaning of the strong physical
+ feelings which had me in their grip without choice of my own.
+ [Experience of physical sex sensations first began about 16 in
+ sleep; masturbation was accidentally discovered at the age of 19,
+ abandoned at 28, and then at 34 deliberately resumed as a method
+ of purely physical relief.] These three things simply would not
+ be reconciled and I said to myself that I must find a way of
+ living in which there was as little sex of any kind as possible.
+ There was something that I simply lacked; that I never doubted.
+ Curiously enough, I thought that the ultimate explanation might
+ be that there were men's minds in women's bodies, but I was more
+ concerned in finding a way of life than in asking riddles without
+ answers.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I thought that one day when I had money and opportunity I would
+ dress in men's clothes and go to another country, in order that I
+ might be unhampered by sex considerations and conventions. I
+ determined to live an honorable, upright, but simple life.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I had no idea at first that homosexual attractions in women
+ existed; afterward observations on the lower animals put the idea
+ into my head. I made no preparation in my mind for any sexual
+ life, though I thought it would be a dreary business repressing
+ my body all my days.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;My relations with other women were entirely pure. My attitude
+ toward my sexual physical feelings was one of reserve and
+ repression, and I think the growing conviction of my radical
+ deficiency somewhere, would have made intimate affection for
+ anyone, with any demonstration in it, a kind of impropriety for
+ which I had no taste.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;However, between 21 and 24 other things happened to me.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;During these few years I saw plenty of men and plenty of women.
+ As regards the men I liked them very well, but I never thought
+ the man would turn up with whom I should care to live. Several
+ men were very friendly with me and three in particular used to
+ write me letters and give me much of their confidence. I invited
+ two of them to visit at my house. All these men talked to me with
+ freedom and even told me about their sexual ideas and doings. One
+ asked me to believe that he was leading a good life; the other
+ two owned that they were not. One discussed the question of
+ homosexuality with me; he has never married. I liked one of them
+ a good deal, being attracted by his softness and gentleness and
+ almost feminine voice. It was hoped that I would take to him and
+ he very cautiously made love to me. I allowed him to kiss me a
+ few times and wrote him a few responsive letters, wondering what
+ I liked in him. Someone then commented on the acquaintance and
+ said 'marriage,' and I woke up to the fact that I did not really
+ want him at all. I think he found the friendship too insipid and
+ was glad to be out of it. All these men were a trifle feminine in
+ characteristics, and <a name='2_Page_242'></a>two played no games. I thought it odd that
+ they should all express admiration for the very boyish qualities
+ in me that other people disliked. A fourth man, something of the
+ same type, told another friend that he always felt surprised at
+ how freely he was able to talk to me, but that he never could
+ feel that I was a woman. Two of these were brilliantly clever
+ men; two were artists.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;At the same period, or earlier, I made a number of women
+ friends, and of course saw more of them. I chose out some and
+ some chose me; I think I attracted them as much as, or even more
+ than, they attracted me. I do not quite remember if this was so,
+ though I can say for certain that it was so at school. There were
+ three or four bright, clever, young women whom I got to know then
+ with whom I was great friends. We were interested in books,
+ social theories, politics, art. Sometimes I visited them or we
+ went on exploring expeditions to many country places or towns.
+ They all in the end either had love affairs or married. I know
+ that in spite of all our free conversations they never talked to
+ me as they did to each other; we were always a little shy with
+ each other. But I got very fond of at least four of them. I
+ admired them and when I was tired and worried I often thought how
+ easily, if I had been a man, I could have married and settled
+ down with one or the other. I used to think it would be
+ delightful to have a woman to work for and take care of. My
+ attraction to these women was very strong, but I don't think they
+ knew it. I seldom even kissed them, but I should often have
+ cheerfully given them a good hugging and kissing if I had thought
+ it a right or proper thing to do. I never wanted them to kiss me
+ half so much as I wanted to kiss them. In these years I felt this
+ with every woman I admired.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;Occasionally, I experienced slight erections when close to other
+ women. I am sure that no deliberate thought of mine caused them,
+ and as I had them at other times too, when I was not expecting
+ them, I think it may have been accidental. What I felt with my
+ mind and what I felt with my body always at this time seemed
+ apart. I cannot accurately describe the interest and attraction
+ that women then were to me. I only know I never felt anything
+ like it for men. All my feelings of desire to do kindnesses, to
+ give presents, to be liked and respected and all such natural
+ small matters, referred to women, not to men, and at this time,
+ both openly and to myself, I said unhesitatingly that I liked
+ women best. It must be remembered that at this time a dislike for
+ men was being fostered in me by those who wanted me to marry, and
+ this must have counted for more than I now remember.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;As regards my physical sexual feelings, which were well
+ established during these few years, I don't think I often
+ indulged in any erotic imaginations worth estimating, but so far
+ as I did at all, I always <a name='2_Page_243'></a>imagined myself as a man loving a
+ woman. I cannot recall ever imagining the opposite, but I seldom
+ imagined anything at all, and I suppose ultimate sex sensations
+ know no sex.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;But as time went on and my physical and psychical feelings met,
+ at any rate in my own mind, I became fully aware of the meaning
+ of love and even, of homosexual possibilities.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I should probably have thought more of this side of things
+ except that during this time I was so worried by the difficulty
+ of living in my home under the perpetual friction of comparison
+ with other people. My life was a sham; I was an actor never off
+ the boards. I had to play at being a something I was not from
+ morning till night, and I had no cessation of the long fatigue I
+ had had at school; in addition I had sex to deal with actively
+ and consciously.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;Looking back on these twenty-four years of my life I only look
+ back on a round of misery. The nervous strain was enormous and so
+ was the moral strain. Instead of a child I felt myself, whenever
+ I desired to please anyone else, a performing monkey. My
+ pleasures were stolen or I was snubbed for taking them. I was not
+ taught and was called a fool. My hand was against everybody's.
+ How it was that with my high spirits and vivid imagination I did
+ not grow up a moral imbecile full of perverted instincts I do not
+ know. I describe myself as a docile child, but I was full of
+ temptations to be otherwise. There were times when I was silent
+ before people, but if I had had a knife in my hand I could have
+ stuck it into them. If it had been desired to make me a
+ thoroughly perverted being I can imagine no better way than the
+ attempt to mould me by force into a particular pattern of girl.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;Looking at my instincts in my first childhood and my mental
+ confusion over myself, I do not believe the most sympathetic and
+ scientific treatment would have turned me into an average girl,
+ but I see no reason why proper physical conditions should not
+ have induced a better physical development and that in its turn
+ have led to tastes more approximate to those of the normal woman.
+ That I do not even now desire to be a normal woman is not to the
+ point.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;Instead of any such help, I suffered during the time that should
+ have been puberty from a profound mental and physical shock which
+ was extended over several years, and in addition I suffered from
+ the outrage of every fine and wholesome feeling I had. These
+ things by checking my physical development gave, I am perfectly
+ convinced, a traumatic impetus to my general abnormality, and
+ this was further kept up by demanding of me (at the dawn of my
+ real sexual activity, and when still practically a child) an
+ interest in men and marriage which I was no more capable of
+ feeling than any ordinary boy or girl of 15. If you had taken a
+ boy of 13 and given him all my conditions, bound him hand <a name='2_Page_244'></a>and
+ foot, when you became afraid of him petted him into docility, and
+ then placed him in the world and, while urging normal sexuality
+ upon him on the one hand, made him disgusted with it on the
+ other, what would have been the probable result?</p>
+
+<p> &quot;Looking back, I can only say I think, the results in my own case
+ were marvellously good, and that I was saved from worse by my own
+ innocence and by the physical backwardness which nature, probably
+ in mercy, bestowed upon me.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I find it difficult to sum up the way in which I affect other
+ women and they me. I can only record my conviction that I do
+ affect a large number, whether abnormally or not I don't know,
+ but I attract them and it would be easy for some of them to
+ become very fond of me if I gave them a chance. They are also, I
+ am certain, more shy with me than they are with other women.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I find it difficult also to sum up their effect on me. I only
+ know that some women attract me and some tempt me physically, and
+ have done ever since I was about 22 or 23. I know that
+ psychically I have always been more interested in women than in
+ men, but have not considered them the best companions or
+ confidants. I feel protective towards them, never feel jealous of
+ them, and hate having differences with them. And I feel always
+ that I am not one of them. If there had been any period in my
+ life when health, and temptation and money and opportunity had
+ made homosexual relations easy I cannot say how I should have
+ resisted. I think that I have never had any such relations simply
+ because I have in a way been safeguarded from them. For a long
+ time I thought I must do without all actual sexual relations and
+ acted up to that. If I had thought any relations right and
+ possible I think I should have striven for heterosexual
+ experiences because of the respect that I had cultivated, indeed
+ I think always had, for the normal and natural. If I had thought
+ it right to indulge any sort of gratification which was within my
+ reach I think I might probably have chosen the homosexual as
+ being perhaps more satisfying and more convenient. I always
+ wanted love and friendship first; later I should have been glad
+ of something to satisfy my sex hunger too, but by that time I
+ could have done without it, or I thought so.&quot;</p>
+
+<p> At a period rather later than that dealt with in this narrative,
+ the subject of it became strongly attracted to a man who was of
+ somewhat feminine and abnormal disposition. But on consideration
+ she decided that it would not be wise to marry him. </p></div>
+
+<p>The commonest characteristic of the sexually inverted woman is a certain
+degree of masculinity or boyishness. As I have already pointed out,
+transvestism in either women or men <a name='2_Page_245'></a>by no means necessarily involves
+inversion. In the volume of <i>Women Adventurers</i>, edited by Mrs. Norman for
+the Adventure Series, there is no trace of inversion; in most of these
+cases, indeed, love for a man was precisely the motive for adopting male
+garments and manners. Again, Colley Cibber's daughter, Charlotte Charke, a
+boyish and vivacious woman, who spent much of her life in men's clothes,
+and ultimately wrote a lively volume of memoirs, appears never to have
+been attracted to women, though women were often attracted to her,
+believing her to be a man; it is, indeed, noteworthy that women seem, with
+special frequency, to fall in love with disguised persons of their own
+sex.<a name='2_FNanchor_166'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_166'><sup>[166]</sup></a> There is, however, a very pronounced tendency among sexually
+inverted women to adopt male attire when practicable. In such cases male
+garments are not usually regarded as desirable chiefly on account of
+practical convenience, nor even in order to make an impression on other
+women, but because the wearer feels more at home in them. Thus, Moll
+mentions the case of a young governess of 16 who, while still unconscious
+of her sexual perversion, used to find pleasure, when everyone was out of
+the house, in putting on the clothes of a youth belonging to the family. <a name='2_Page_246'></a></p>
+
+<div class='blkquot'><p>Cases have been recorded of inverted women who spent the greater
+ part of their lives in men's clothing and been generally regarded
+ as men. I may cite the case of Lucy Ann Slater, <i>alias</i> the Rev.
+ Joseph Lobdell, recorded by Wise (<i>Alienist and Neurologist</i>,
+ 1883). She was masculine in character, features, and attire. In
+ early life she married and had a child, but had no affection for
+ her husband, who eventually left her. As usual in such cases, her
+ masculine habits appeared in early childhood. She was expert with
+ the rifle, lived the life of a trapper and hunter among the
+ Indians, and was known as the &quot;Female Hunter of Long Eddy.&quot; She
+ published a book regarding those experiences. I have not been
+ able to see it, but it is said to be quaint and well written. She
+ regarded herself as practically a man, and became attached to a
+ young woman of good education, who had also been deserted by her
+ husband. The affection was strong and emotional, and, of course,
+ without deception. It was interrupted by her recognition and
+ imprisonment as a vagabond, but on the petition of her &quot;wife&quot; she
+ was released. &quot;I may be a woman in one sense,&quot; she said, &quot;but I
+ have peculiar organs which make me more a man than a woman.&quot; She
+ alluded to an enlarged clitoris which she could erect, she said,
+ as a turtle protrudes its head, but there was no question of its
+ use in coitus. She was ultimately brought to the asylum with
+ paroxysmal attacks of exaltation and erotomania (without
+ self-abuse apparently) and corresponding periods of depression,
+ and she died with progressive dementia. I may also mention the
+ case (briefly recorded in the <i>Lancet</i>, February 22, 1884) of a
+ person called John Coulter, who was employed for twelve years as
+ a laborer by the Belfast Harbor Commissioners. When death
+ resulted from injuries caused in falling down stairs, it was
+ found that this person was a woman. She was fifty years of age,
+ and had apparently spent the greater part of her life as a man.
+ When employed in early life as a manservant on a farm, she had
+ married her mistress's daughter. The pair were married for
+ twenty-nine years, but during the last six years lived apart,
+ owing to the &quot;husband's&quot; dissipated habits. No one ever suspected
+ her sex. She was of masculine appearance and good muscular
+ development. The &quot;wife&quot; took charge of the body and buried it.</p>
+
+<p> A more recent case of the same kind is that of &quot;Murray Hall,&quot; who
+ died in New York in 1901. Her real name was Mary Anderson, and
+ she was born at Govan, in Scotland. Early left an orphan, on the
+ death of her only brother she put on his clothes and went to
+ Edinburgh, working as a man. Her secret was discovered during an
+ illness, and she finally went to America, where she lived as a
+ man for thirty years, making money, and becoming somewhat
+ notorious as a Tammany politician, a rather riotous &quot;man about
+ town.&quot; The secret was not discovered till her death, when it was
+ a complete revelation, even to her adopted daughter.<a name='2_Page_247'></a> She married
+ twice; the first marriage ended in separation, but the second
+ marriage seemed to have been happy, for it lasted twenty years,
+ when the &quot;wife&quot; died. She associated much with pretty girls, and
+ was very jealous of them. She seems to have been slight and not
+ very masculine in general build, with a squeaky voice, but her
+ ways, attitude, and habits were all essentially masculine. She
+ associated with politicians, drank somewhat to excess, though not
+ heavily, swore a great deal, smoked and chewed tobacco, sang
+ ribald songs; could run, dance, and fight like a man, and had
+ divested herself of every trace of feminine daintiness. She wore
+ clothes that were always rather too large in order to hide her
+ form, baggy trousers, and an overcoat even in summer. She is said
+ to have died of cancer of the breast. (I quote from an account,
+ which appears to be reliable, contained in the <i>Weekly
+ Scotsman</i>, February 9, 1901.)</p>
+
+<p> Another case, described in the London papers, is that of
+ Catharine Coome, who for forty years successfully personated a
+ man and adopted masculine habits generally. She married a lady's
+ maid, with whom she lived for fourteen years. Having latterly
+ adopted a life of fraud, her case gained publicity as that of the
+ &quot;man-woman.&quot;</p>
+
+<p> In 1901 the death on board ship was recorded of Miss Caroline
+ Hall, of Boston, a water-color painter who had long resided in
+ Milan. Three years previously she discarded female dress and
+ lived as &quot;husband&quot; to a young Italian lady, also an artist, whom
+ she had already known for seven years. She called herself &quot;Mr.
+ Hall&quot; and appeared to be a thoroughly normal young man, able to
+ shoot with a rifle and fond of manly sports. The officers of the
+ ship stated that she smoked and drank heartily, joked with the
+ other male passengers, and was hail-fellow-well-met with
+ everyone. Death was due to advanced tuberculosis of the lungs,
+ hastened by excessive drinking and smoking.</p>
+
+<p> Ellen Glenn, <i>alias</i> Ellis Glenn, a notorious swindler, who came
+ prominently before the public in Chicago during 1905, was another
+ &quot;man-woman,&quot; of large and masculine type. She preferred to dress
+ as a man and had many love escapades with women. &quot;She can fiddle
+ as well as anyone in the State,&quot; said a man who knew her, &quot;can
+ box like a pugilist, and can dance and play cards.&quot;</p>
+
+<p> In Seville, a few years ago, an elderly policeman, who had been
+ in attendance on successive governors of that city for thirty
+ years, was badly injured in a street accident. He was taken to
+ the hospital and the doctor there discovered that the &quot;policeman&quot;
+ was a woman. She went by the name of Fernando Mackenzie and
+ during the whole of her long service no suspicion whatever was
+ aroused as to her sex. She was French by birth, born in Paris in
+ 1836, but her father was English and her mother Spanish. She
+ assumed her male disguise when <a name='2_Page_248'></a>she was a girl and served her
+ time in the French army, then emigrated to Spain, at the age of
+ 35, and contrived to enter the Madrid police force disguised as a
+ man. She married there and pretended that her wife's child was
+ her own son. She removed to Seville, still serving as a
+ policeman, and was engaged there as cook and orderly at the
+ governor's palace. She served seven successive governors. In
+ consequence of the discovery of her sex she has been discharged
+ from the police without the pension due to her; her wife had died
+ two years previously, and &quot;Fernando&quot; spent all she possessed on
+ the woman's funeral. Mackenzie had a soft voice, a refined face
+ with delicate features, and was neatly dressed in male attire.
+ When asked how she escaped detection so long, she replied that
+ she always lived quietly in her own house with her wife and did
+ her duty by her employers so that no one meddled with her.</p>
+
+<p> In Chicago in 1906 much attention was attracted to the case of
+ &quot;Nicholai de Raylan,&quot; confidential secretary to the Russian
+ Consul, who at death (of tuberculosis) at the age of 33 was found
+ to be a woman. She was born in Russia and was in many respects
+ very feminine, small and slight in build, but was regarded as a
+ man, and even as very &quot;manly,&quot; by both men and women who knew her
+ intimately. She was always very neat in dress, fastidious in
+ regard to shirts and ties, and wore a long-waisted coat to
+ disguise the lines of her figure. She was married twice in
+ America, being divorced by the first wife, after a union lasting
+ ten years, on the ground of cruelty and misconduct with chorus
+ girls. The second wife, a chorus girl who had been previously
+ married and had a child, was devoted to her &quot;husband.&quot; Both wives
+ were firmly convinced that their husband was a man and ridiculed
+ the idea that &quot;he&quot; could be a woman. I am informed that De Raylan
+ wore a very elaborately constructed artificial penis. In her will
+ she made careful arrangements to prevent detection of sex after
+ death, but these were frustrated, as she died in a hospital.</p>
+
+<p> In St. Louis, in 1909, the case was brought forward of a young
+ woman of 22, who had posed as a man for nine years. Her masculine
+ career began at the age of 13 after the Galveston flood which
+ swept away all her family. She was saved and left Texas dressed
+ as a boy. She worked in livery stables, in a plough factory, and
+ as a bill-poster. At one time she was the adopted son of the
+ family in which she lived and had no difficulty in deceiving her
+ sisters by adoption as to her sex. On coming to St. Louis in 1902
+ she made chairs and baskets at the American Rattan Works,
+ associating with fellow-workmen on a footing of masculine
+ equality. One day a workman noticed the extreme smallness and
+ dexterity of her hands. &quot;Gee, Bill, you should have been a girl.&quot;
+ &quot;How do you know I'm not?&quot; she retorted. In such <a name='2_Page_249'></a>ways her ready
+ wit and good humor always, disarmed suspicion as to her sex. She
+ shunned no difficulties in her work or in her sports, we are
+ told, and never avoided the severest tests. &quot;She drank, she
+ swore, she courted girls, she worked as hard as her fellows, she
+ fished and camped; she told stories with the best of them, and
+ she did not flinch when the talk grew strong. She even chewed
+ tobacco.&quot; Girls began to fall in love with the good-looking boy
+ at an early period, and she frequently boasted of her feminine
+ conquests; with one girl who worshipped her there was a question
+ of marriage. On account of lack of education she was restricted
+ to manual labor, and she often chose hard work. At one time she
+ became a boiler-maker's apprentice, wielding a hammer and driving
+ in hot rivets. Here she was very popular and became local
+ secretary of the International Brotherhood of Boiler-makers. In
+ physical development she was now somewhat of an athlete. &quot;She
+ could outrun any of her friends on a sprint; she could kick
+ higher, play baseball, and throw the ball overhand like a man,
+ and she was fond of football. As a wrestler she could throw most
+ of the club members.&quot; The physician who examined her for an
+ insurance policy remarked: &quot;You are a fine specimen of physical
+ manhood, young fellow. Take good care of yourself.&quot; Finally, in a
+ moment of weakness, she admitted her sex and returned to the
+ garments of womanhood.</p>
+
+<p> In London, in 1912, a servant-girl of 23 was charged in the Acton
+ Police Court with being &quot;disorderly and masquerading,&quot; having
+ assumed man's clothes and living with another girl, taller and
+ more handsome than herself, as husband and wife. She had had
+ slight brain trouble as a child, and was very intelligent, with a
+ too active brain; in her spare time she had written stories for
+ magazines. The two girls became attached through doing Christian
+ social work together in their spare time, and resolved to live as
+ husband and wife to prevent any young man from coming forward.
+ The &quot;husband&quot; became a plumber's mate, and displayed some skill
+ at fisticuffs when at length discovered by the &quot;wife's&quot; brother.
+ Hence her appearance in the Police Court. Both girls were sent
+ back to their friends, and situations found for them as
+ day-servants. But as they remained devoted to each other
+ arrangements were made for them to live together.</p>
+
+<p> Another case that may be mentioned is that of Cora Anderson, &quot;the
+ man-woman of Milwaukee,&quot; who posed for thirteen years as a man,
+ and during that period lived with two women as her wives without
+ her disguise being penetrated. (Her &quot;Confessions&quot; were published
+ in the <i>Day Book</i> of Chicago during May, 1914.)</p>
+
+<p> It would be easy to bring forward other cases. A few instances of
+ marriage between women will be found in the <i>Alienist and
+ Neurologist</i>,<a name='2_Page_250'></a> Nov., 1902, p. 497. In all such cases more or less
+ fraud has been exercised. I know of one case, probably unique, in
+ which the ceremony was gone through without any deception on any
+ side: a congenitally inverted Englishwoman of distinguished
+ intellectual ability, now dead, was attached to the wife of a
+ clergyman, who, in full cognizance of all the facts of the case,
+ privately married the two ladies in his own church. </p></div>
+
+<p>When they still retain female garments, these usually show some traits of
+masculine simplicity, and there is nearly always a disdain for the petty
+feminine artifices of the toilet. Even when this is not obvious, there are
+all sorts of instinctive gestures and habits which may suggest to female
+acquaintances the remark that such a person &quot;ought to have been a man.&quot;
+The brusque, energetic movements, the attitude of the arms, the direct
+speech, the inflexions of the voice, the masculine straightforwardness and
+sense of honor, and especially the attitude toward men, free from any
+suggestion either of shyness or audacity, will often suggest the
+underlying psychic abnormality to a keen observer.</p>
+
+<p>In the habits not only is there frequently a pronounced taste for smoking
+cigarettes, often found in quite feminine women, but also a decided taste
+and toleration for cigars. There is also a dislike and sometimes
+incapacity for needlework and other domestic occupations, while there is
+often some capacity for athletics.</p>
+
+<div class='blkquot'><p>As regards the general bearing of the inverted woman, in its most
+ marked and undisguised form, I may quote an admirable description
+ by Prof. Zuccarelli, of Naples, of an unmarried middle-class
+ woman of 35: &quot;While retaining feminine garments, her bearing is
+ as nearly as possible a man's. She wears her thin hair thrown
+ carelessly back <i>alla Umberto</i>, and fastened in a simple knot at
+ the back of her head. The breasts are little developed, and
+ compressed beneath a high corset; her gown is narrow without the
+ expansion demanded by fashion. Her straw hat with broad plaits is
+ perhaps adorned by a feather, or she wears a small hat like a
+ boy's. She does not carry an umbrella or sunshade, and walks out
+ alone, refusing the company of men; or she is accompanied by a
+ woman, as she prefers, offering her arm and carrying the other
+ hand at her waist, with the air of a fine gentleman. In a
+ carriage her bearing is peculiar and unlike that habitual with
+ women. Seated in the middle of the double <a name='2_Page_251'></a>seat, her knees being
+ crossed or else the legs well separated, with a virile air and
+ careless easy movements she turns her head in every direction,
+ finding an acquaintance here and there with her eye, saluting men
+ and women with a large gesture of the hand as a business man
+ would. In conversation her pose is similar; she gesticulates
+ much, is vivacious in speech, with much power of mimicry, and
+ while talking she arches the inner angles of her eyebrow, making
+ vertical wrinkles at the center of her forehead. Her laugh is
+ open and explosive and uncovers her white rows of teeth. With men
+ she is on terms of careless equality.&quot; (&quot;Inversione congenita
+ dell'istinto sessuale in una donna,&quot; <i>L'Anomalo</i>, February,
+ 1889.)</p>
+
+<p> &quot;The inverted woman,&quot; Hirschfeld truly remarks (<i>Die
+ Homosexualit&auml;t</i>, p. 158), &quot;is more full of life, of enterprise,
+ of practical energy, more aggressive, more heroic, more apt for
+ adventure, than either the heterosexual woman or the homosexual
+ man.&quot; Sometimes, he adds, her mannishness may approach reckless
+ brutality, and her courage becomes rashness. This author
+ observes, however, in another place (p. 272) that, in addition to
+ this group of inverted women with masculine traits there is
+ another group, &quot;not less large,&quot; of equally inverted women who
+ are outwardly as thoroughly feminine as are normal women. This is
+ not an observation which I am able to confirm. It appears to me
+ that the great majority of inverted women possess some masculine
+ or boyish traits, even though only as slight as those which may
+ occasionally be revealed by normal women. Extreme femininity, in
+ my observation, is much more likely to be found in bisexual than
+ in homosexual women, just as extreme masculinity is much more
+ likely to be found in bisexual than in homosexual men. </p></div>
+
+<p>While inverted women frequently, though not always, convey an impression
+of mannishness or boyishness, there are no invariable anatomical
+characteristics associated with this impression. There is, for instance,
+no uniform tendency to a masculine distribution of hair. Nor must it be
+supposed that the presence of a beard in a woman indicates a homosexual
+tendency. &quot;Bearded women,&quot; as Hirschfeld remarks, are scarcely ever
+inverted, and it would seem that the strongest reversals of secondary
+sexual characters less often accompany homosexuality than slighter
+modifications of these characters.<a name='2_FNanchor_167'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_167'><sup>[167]</sup></a> A faint moustache and other slight
+manifestations of hypertrichosis also <a name='2_Page_252'></a>by no means necessarily indicate
+homosexuality. To some extent it is a matter of race; thus in the Pera
+district of Constantinople, Weissenberg, among nearly seven hundred women
+between about 18 and 50 years of age, noted that 10 per cent, showed hair
+on the upper lip; they were most often Armenians, the Greeks coming
+next.<a name='2_FNanchor_168'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_168'><sup>[168]</sup></a></p>
+
+<div class='blkquot'><p>There has been some dispute as to whether, apart from
+ homosexuality, hypertrichosis in a woman can be regarded as an
+ indication of a general masculinity. This is denied by Max
+ Bartels (in his elaborate study, &quot;Ueber abnorme Behaarung beim
+ Menschen,&quot; <i>Zeitschrift f&uuml;r Ethnologie</i>, 1876, p. 127; 1881, p.
+ 219) and, as regards insanity, by L. Harris-Liston (&quot;Cases of
+ Bearded Women,&quot; <i>British Medical Journal</i>, June 2, 1894). On the
+ other hand, J. H. Claiborne (&quot;Hypertrichosis in Women,&quot; <i>New York
+ Medical Journal</i>, June 13, 1914) believes that hair on the face
+ and body in a woman is a sign of masculinity; &quot;women with
+ hypertrichosis possess masculine traits.&quot;</p>
+
+<p> There seems to be very little doubt that fully developed &quot;bearded
+ women&quot; are in most, possibly not all, cases decidedly feminine in
+ all other respects. A typical instance is furnished by Annie
+ Jones, the &quot;Esau Lady&quot; of Virginia. She belonged to a large and
+ entirely normal family, but herself possessed a full beard with
+ thick whiskers and moustache of an entirely masculine type; she
+ also showed short, dark hair on arms and hands resembling a man.
+ Apart from this heterogeny, she was entirely normal and feminine.
+ At the age of 26, when examined in Berlin, the hair of the head
+ was very long, the expression of the face entirely feminine, the
+ voice also feminine, the figure elegant, the hands and feet
+ entirely of feminine type, the external and internal genitalia
+ altogether feminine. Annie Jones was married. Max Bartels, who
+ studied Annie Jones and published her portrait (<i>Zeitschrift f&uuml;r
+ Ethnologie</i>, 1891, Heft 3, p. 243), remarks that in these
+ respects Annie Jones resembles other &quot;bearded women&quot;; they marry,
+ have children, and are able to suckle them. A beard in women
+ seems, as Dupr&eacute; and Duflos believe (<i>Revue Neurologique</i>, Aug.
+ 30, 1901), to be more closely correlated with neuropathy than
+ with masculinity; comparing a thousand sane women with a thousand
+ insane women in Paris, they found unusual degree of hair or down
+ on the face in 23 per cent. of the former and 50 per cent. of the
+ latter; but even the sane bearded women frequently belonged to
+ neuropathic families.</p>
+
+<p> A tendency to slight widely diffused hypertrichosis of the body
+ generally, not localized or highly developed on the face, seems
+ much <a name='2_Page_253'></a>more likely than a beard to be associated with masculinity,
+ even when it occurs in little girls. Thus Virchow once presented
+ to the Berlin Anthropological Society a little girl of 5 of this
+ type who also possessed a deep and rough voice (<i>Zeitschrift f&uuml;r
+ Ethnologie</i>, 1891, Heft 4, p. 469). A typical example of slight
+ hypertrichosis in a woman associated with general masculine
+ traits is furnished by a description and figure of the body of a
+ woman of 56 in an anatomical institute, furnished by C. Strauch
+ (<i>Zeitschrift f&uuml;r Ethnologie</i>, 1901, Heft 6, p. 534). In this
+ case there was a growth of hair around both nipples and a line of
+ hair extended from the pubes to the navel; both these two
+ dispositions of hair are very rare in women. (In Vienna among
+ nearly 700 women Coe only found a tendency to hair distribution
+ toward the navel in about 1 per cent.). While the hair in this
+ subject was otherwise fairly normal, there were many
+ approximations to the masculine type in other respects: the
+ muscles were strongly developed, the bones massive, the limbs
+ long, the joints powerful, the hands and feet large, the thorax
+ well developed, the lower jaw massive; there was an absence of
+ feminine curves on the body and the breasts were scarcely
+ perceptible. At the same time the genital organs were normal and
+ there had been childbirth. It was further notable that this woman
+ had committed suicide by self-strangulation, a rare method which
+ requires great resolution and strength of will, as at any moment
+ of the process the pressure can be removed. </p></div>
+
+<p>There seems little doubt that inverted women frequently tend to show minor
+anomalies of the piliferous system, and especially slight hypertrichosis
+and a masculine distribution of hair. Thus in a very typical case of
+inversion in an Italian girl of 19 who dressed as a man and ran away from
+home, the down on the arms and legs was marked to an unusual extent, and
+there was very abundant hair in the armpits and on the pubes, with a
+tendency to the masculine distribution.<a name='2_FNanchor_169'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_169'><sup>[169]</sup></a> Of the three cases described
+in this chapter which I am best acquainted with, one possesses an
+unusually small amount of hair on the pubes and in the axill&aelig;
+(oligotrichosis terminalis), approximating to the infantile type, while
+another presents a complex and very rare piliferous heterogeny. There is
+marked dark down on the upper <a name='2_Page_254'></a>lip; the pubic hair is thick, and there is
+hair on toes and feet and legs to umbilicus; there are also a few hairs
+around the nipples. A woman physician in the United States who knows many
+female inverts similarly tells me that she has observed the tendency to
+growth of hair on the legs. If, as is not improbable, inversion is
+associated with some abnormal balance in the internal secretions, it is
+not difficult to understand this tendency to piliferous anomalies; and we
+know that the thyroid secretion, for instance, and much more the
+testicular and ovarian secretions, have a powerful influence on the hair.</p>
+
+<div class='blkquot'><p>Ballantyne, some years ago, in discussing congenital
+ hypertrichosis (<i>Manual of Antenatal Pathology</i>, 1902, pp. 321-6)
+ concluded that the theory of arrested development is best
+ supported by the facts; persistence of lanugo is such an arrest,
+ and hypertrichosis may largely be considered a persistence of
+ lanugo. Such a conclusion is still tenable,&mdash;though it encounters
+ some difficulties and inconsistencies,&mdash;and it largely agrees
+ with what we know of the condition as associated with inversion
+ in women. But we are now beginning to see that this arrested
+ development may be definitely associated with anomalies in the
+ internal secretions, and even with special chemical defects in
+ these secretions. Virile strength has always been associated with
+ hair, as the story of Samson bears witness. Ammon found among
+ Baden conscripts (<i>L'Anthropologie</i>, 1896, p. 285) that when the
+ men were divided into classes according to the amount of hair on
+ body, the first class, with least hair, have the smallest
+ circumference of testicle, the fewest number of men with glans
+ penis uncovered, the largest number of infantile voices, the
+ largest proportion of blue eyes and fair hair, the smallest
+ average height, weight, and chest circumference, while in all
+ these respects the men with hairy bodies were at the other
+ extreme. It has been known from antiquity that in men early
+ castration affects the growth of hair. It is now known that in
+ women the presence or absence of the ovary and, other glands
+ affects the hair, as well as sexual development. Thus Hegar
+ (<i>Beitr&auml;ge zur Geburtsh&uuml;lfe und Gyn&auml;kologie</i>, vol. i, p. 111,
+ 1898) described a girl with pelvis of infantile type and uterine
+ malformation who had been unusually hairy on face and body from
+ infancy, with masculine arrangement of hair on pubes and abdomen;
+ menstruation was scanty, breasts atrophic; the hair was of lanugo
+ type; we see here how in women infantile and masculine
+ characteristics are associated with, and both probably dependent
+ on, defects in the sexual glands. Plant (<i>Centralblatt f&uuml;r
+ Gyn&auml;kologie</i>, No. 9, 1896) described another girl with very small
+ ovaries, <a name='2_Page_255'></a>rudimentary uterus, small vagina, and prominent nymph&aelig;,
+ in whom menstruation was absent, hair on head long and strong,
+ but hair absent in armpits and scanty on mons veneris. These two
+ cases seem inconsistent as regards hair, and we should now wish
+ to know the condition of the other internal glands. The thyroid,
+ for instance, it is now known, controls the hair, as well as do
+ the sexual glands; and the thyroid, as Gautier has shown
+ (Acad&eacute;mie de M&eacute;decine, July 24, 1900) elaborates arsenic and
+ iodine, which nourish the skin and hair; he found that the
+ administration of sodium cacodylate to young women produced
+ abundant growth of hair on head. Again, the kidneys, and
+ especially the adrenal glands, influence the hair. It has long
+ been known that in girls with congenital renal tumors there is an
+ abnormally early growth of axillary and pubic hair; Goldschwend
+ (<i>Pr&auml;ger medizinische Wochenschrift</i>, Nos. 37 and 38, 1910) has
+ described the case of a woman of 39, with small ovaries and
+ adrenal tumor, in whom hair began to grow on chin and cheeks.
+ (See also C. T. Ewart, <i>Lancet</i>, May 19, 1915.) Once more, the
+ glans hypophysis also affects hair growth and it has been found
+ by L&eacute;vi (quoted in <i>Archives d'Anthropologie Criminelle</i>,
+ August-September, 1912, p. 711) that the administration of
+ hypophysis extract to an infantile, hairless woman of 27, without
+ sexual feeling, produced a general tendency to growth of hair.
+ Such facts not only help to explain the anomalies of hair
+ development, but also indicate the direction in which we may find
+ an explanation of the anomalies of the sexual impulse. </p></div>
+
+<p>Apart from the complicated problem presented by the hair, there are
+genuine approximations to the masculine type. The muscles tend to be
+everywhere firm, with a comparative absence of soft connective tissue; so
+that an inverted woman may give an unfeminine impression to the sense of
+touch. A certain tonicity of the muscles has indeed often been observed in
+homosexual women. Hirschfeld found that two-thirds of inverted women are
+more muscular than normal women, while, on the other hand, he found that
+among inverted men the musculature was often weak.</p>
+
+<p>Not only is the tone of the voice often different, but there is reason to
+suppose that this rests on a basis, of anatomical modification. At Moll's
+suggestion, Flatau examined the larynx in a large number of inverted
+women, and found in several a very decidedly masculine type of larynx, or
+an approach to it, especially <a name='2_Page_256'></a>in cases of distinctly congenital origin.
+Hirschfeld has confirmed Flatau's observations on this point. It may be
+added that inverted women are very often good whistlers; Hirschfeld even
+knows two who are public performers in whistling. It is scarcely necessary
+to remark that while the old proverb associates whistling in a woman with
+crowing in a hen, whistling in a woman is no evidence of any general
+physical or psychic inversion.</p>
+
+<p>As regards the sexual organs it seems possible, so far as my observations
+go, to speak more definitely of inverted women than of inverted men. In
+all three of the cases concerning whom I have precise information, among
+those whose histories are recorded in the present chapter, there is more
+or less arrested development and infantilism. In one a somewhat small
+vagina and prominent nymph&aelig;, with local sensitiveness, are associated with
+oligotrichosis. In another the sexual parts are in some respects rather
+small, while there is no trace of ovary on one side. In the third case,
+together with hypertrichosis, the nates are small, the nymph&aelig; large, the
+clitoris deeply hooded, the hymen thick, and the vagina probably small.
+These observations, though few, are significant, and they accord with
+those of other observers.<a name='2_FNanchor_170'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_170'><sup>[170]</sup></a> Krafft-Ebing well described a case which I
+should be inclined to regard as typical of many: sexual organs feminine in
+character, but remaining at the infantile stage of a girl of 10; small
+clitoris, prominent cockscomb-like nymph&aelig;, small vagina scarcely
+permitting normal intercourse and very sensitive. Hirschfeld agrees in
+finding common an approach to the type described by Krafft-Ebing; atrophic
+anomalies he regards as more common than hypertrophic, and he refers to
+thickness of hymen and a tendency to notably small uterus and ovaries. The
+clitoris is more usually small than large; women with a large clitoris (as
+Parent-Duch&acirc;telet long since remarked) seem rarely to be of masculine
+type. <a name='2_Page_257'></a></p>
+
+<p>Notwithstanding these tendencies, however, sexual inversion in a woman is,
+as a rule, not more obvious than in a man. At the same time, the inverted
+woman is not usually attractive to men. She herself generally feels the
+greatest indifference to men, and often, cannot understand why a woman
+should love a man, though she easily understands why a man should love a
+woman. She shows, therefore, nothing of that sexual shyness and engaging
+air of weakness and dependence which are an invitation to men. The man who
+is passionately attracted to an inverted woman is usually of rather a
+feminine type. For instance, in one case present to my mind he was of
+somewhat neurotic heredity, of slight physical development, not sexually
+attractive to women, and very domesticated in his manner of living; in
+short, a man who might easily have been passionately attracted to his own
+sex.</p>
+
+<p>While the inverted woman is cold, or, at most, comradely in her bearing
+toward men, she may become shy and confused in the presence of attractive
+persons of her own sex, even unable to undress in their presence, and full
+of tender ardor for the woman whom she loves.<a name='2_FNanchor_171'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_171'><sup>[171]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>Homosexual passion in women finds more or less complete expression in
+kissing, sleeping together, and close embraces, as in what is sometimes
+called &quot;lying spoons,&quot; when one woman lies on her side with her back
+turned to her friend and embraces her from behind, fitting her thighs into
+the bend of her companion's legs, so that her mons veneris is in dose
+contact with the other's buttocks, and slight movement then produces mild
+erethism. One may also lie on the other's body, or there may be mutual
+masturbation. Mutual contact and friction of the sexual parts seem to be
+comparatively rare, but it seems to have been common in antiquity, for we
+owe to it the term &quot;tribadism&quot; which is sometimes used as a synonym of
+feminine homosexuality, and this method is said to be practised today by
+<a name='2_Page_258'></a>the southern Slav women of the Balkans.<a name='2_FNanchor_172'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_172'><sup>[172]</sup></a> The extreme gratification is
+<i>cunnilinctus</i>, or oral stimulation of the feminine sexual organs, not
+usually mutual, but practised by the more active and masculine partner;
+this act is sometimes termed, by no means satisfactorily, &quot;Sapphism,&quot; and
+&quot;Lesbianism.&quot;<a name='2_FNanchor_173'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_173'><sup>[173]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>An enlarged clitoris is but rarely found in inversion and plays a very
+small part in the gratification of feminine homosexuality. Kiernan refers;
+to a case, occurring in America, in which an inverted woman, married and a
+mother, possessed a clitoris which measured 2&frac12; inches when erect. Casanova
+described an inverted Swiss, woman, otherwise feminine in development,
+whose clitoris in excitement was longer than his little finger, and
+capable of penetration.<a name='2_FNanchor_174'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_174'><sup>[174]</sup></a> The older literature contains many similar
+cases. In most such cases, however, we are probably concerned with some
+form of pseudohermaphroditism, and the &quot;clitoris&quot; may more properly be
+regarded as a penis; there is thus no inversion involved.<a name='2_FNanchor_175'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_175'><sup>[175]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>While the use of the clitoris is rare in homosexuality, the use of an
+artificial penis is by no means uncommon and very widespread. In several
+of the modern cases in which inverted women have married women (such as
+those of Sarolta Vay and De Raylan) the belief of the wife in the
+masculinity of the &quot;husband&quot; has been due to an appliance of this kind
+used in intercourse. The artificial penis (the olisbos, or baubon) was
+well known to the Greeks and is described by Herondas. Its invention was
+ascribed by Suidas to the Milesian women, and Miletus, according to
+Aristophanes in the <i>Lysistrata</i>, was the <a name='2_Page_259'></a>chief place of its
+manufacture.<a name='2_FNanchor_176'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_176'><sup>[176]</sup></a> It was still known in medieval times, and in the twelfth
+century Bishop Burchard, of Worms, speaks of its use as a thing &quot;which
+some women are accustomed to do.&quot; In the early eighteenth century,
+Margaretha Lincken, again in Germany, married another woman with the aid
+of an artificial male organ.<a name='2_FNanchor_177'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_177'><sup>[177]</sup></a> The artificial penis is also used by
+homosexual women in various parts of the world. Thus we find it mentioned
+in legends of the North American Indians and it is employed in Zanzibar
+and Madagascar.<a name='2_FNanchor_178'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_178'><sup>[178]</sup></a></p>
+
+<div class='blkquot'><p>The various phenomena of sadism, masochism, and fetichism which
+ are liable to arise, spontaneously or by suggestion, in the
+ relationships of normal lovers, as well as of male inverts, may
+ also arise in the same way among inverted women, though,
+ probably, not often in a very pronounced form. Moll, however,
+ narrates a case (<i>Kontr&auml;re Sexualempfindung</i>, 1899, pp. 565-70)
+ in which various minor but very definite perversions were
+ combined with inversion. A young lady of 26, of good heredity,
+ from the age of 6 had only been attracted to her own sex, and
+ even in childhood had practised mutual <i>cunnilinctus</i>. She was
+ extremely intelligent, and of generous and good-natured
+ disposition, with various masculine tastes, but, on the whole, of
+ feminine build and with completely feminine larynx. During seven
+ years she lived exclusively with one woman. She found complete
+ satisfaction <a name='2_Page_260'></a>in active <i>cunnilinctus</i>. During the course of this
+ relationship various other methods of excitement and
+ gratification arose&mdash;it seems, for the most part, spontaneously.
+ She found much pleasure in urolagnic and coprolagnic practices.
+ In addition to these and similar perversions, the subject liked
+ being bitten, especially in the lobule of the ear, and she was
+ highly excited when whipped by her friend, who should, if
+ possible, be naked at the time; only the nates must be whipped
+ and only a birch rod be used, or the effect would not be
+ obtained. These practices would not be possible to her in the
+ absence of extreme intimacy and mutual understanding, and they
+ only took place with the one friend. In this case the perverse
+ phenomena were masochistic rather than sadistic. Many homosexual
+ women, however, display sadistic tendencies in a more or less
+ degree. Thus Dr. Kiernan tells me of an American case, with which
+ he was professionally concerned with Dr. Moyer (see also paper by
+ Kiernan and Moyer in <i>Alienist and Neurologist</i>, May, 1907), of a
+ sadistic inverted woman in a small Illinois city, married and
+ with two young children. She was of undoubted neuropathic stock
+ and there was a history of pre-marital masturbation and
+ bestiality with a dog. She was a prominent club woman in her city
+ and a leader in religious and social matters; as is often the
+ case with sadists she was pruriently prudish, and there was
+ strong testimony to her chaste and modest character by clergymen,
+ club women, and local magnates. The victim of her sadistic
+ passion was a girl she had adopted from a Home, but whom she half
+ starved. On this girl she inflicted over three hundred wounds.
+ Many of these wounds were stabs with forks and scissors which
+ merely penetrated the skin. This was especially the case with
+ those inflicted on the breasts, labia, and clitoris. During the
+ infliction of these she experienced intense excitement, but this
+ excitement was under control, and when she heard anyone
+ approaching she instantly desisted. She was found sane and
+ responsible at the time of these actions, but the jury also found
+ that she had since become insane and she was sent to an Insane
+ Hospital, after recovery to serve a sentence of two years in
+ prison. The alleged insanity, Dr. Kiernan adds, was of the
+ dubious manic and depressive variety, and perhaps chiefly due to
+ wounded pride. </p></div>
+
+<p>The inverted woman is an enthusiastic admirer of feminine beauty,
+especially of the statuesque beauty of the body, unlike, in this, the
+normal woman, whose sexual emotion is but faintly tinged by esthetic
+feeling. In her sexual habits we perhaps less often find the degree of
+promiscuity which is not uncommon <a name='2_Page_261'></a>among inverted men, and we may perhaps
+agree with Moll that homosexual women are more often apt to love
+faithfully and lastingly than homosexual men. Hirschfeld remarks that
+inverted women are not usually attracted in girlhood by the autoerotic and
+homosexual vices of school-life,<a name='2_FNanchor_179'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_179'><sup>[179]</sup></a> and nearly all the women whose
+histories I have recorded in this chapter felt a pronounced repugnance to
+such manifestations and cherished lofty ideals of love.</p>
+
+<p>Inverted women are not rarely married. Moll, from various confidences
+which he has received, believes that inverted women have not the same
+horror of normal coitus as inverted, men; this is probably due to the fact
+that the woman under such circumstances can retain a certain passivity. In
+other cases there is some degree of bisexuality, although, as among
+inverted men, the homosexual instinct seems usually to give the greater
+relief and gratification.</p>
+
+<p>It has been stated by many observers&mdash;in America, in France, in Germany,
+and in England&mdash;that homosexuality is increasing among women.<a name='2_FNanchor_180'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_180'><sup>[180]</sup></a> There
+are many influences in our civilization today which encourage such
+manifestations.<a name='2_FNanchor_181'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_181'><sup>[181]</sup></a> The <a name='2_Page_262'></a>modern movement of emancipation&mdash;the movement to
+obtain the same rights and duties as men, the same freedom and
+responsibility, the same education and the same work&mdash;must be regarded as,
+on the whole, a wholesome and inevitable movement. But it carries with it
+certain disadvantages.<a name='2_FNanchor_182'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_182'><sup>[182]</sup></a> Women are, very justly, coming to look upon
+knowledge and experience generally as their right as much as their
+brothers' right. But when this doctrine is applied to the sexual sphere it
+finds certain limitations. Intimacies of any kind between young men and
+young women are as much discouraged socially now as ever they were; as
+regards higher education, the mere association of the sexes in the
+lecture-room or the laboratory or the hospital is discouraged in England
+and in America. While men are allowed freedom, the sexual field of women
+is becoming restricted to trivial flirtation with the opposite sex, and to
+intimacy with their own sex; having been taught independence of men and
+disdain for the old theory which placed women in the moated grange of the
+home to sigh for a man who never comes, a tendency develops for women to
+carry this independence still farther and to find love where they find
+work. These unquestionable influences of modern movements cannot directly
+cause sexual inversion, but they develop the germs of it, and they
+probably cause a spurious imitation. This spurious imitation is due to the
+fact that the congenital anomaly occurs with special frequency in women of
+high intelligence who, voluntarily or involuntarily, influence others.</p>
+
+<div class='blkquot'><p>Kurella, Bloch, and others believe that the woman movement has
+ helped to develop homosexuality (see, <i>e.g.</i>, I. Bloch, <i>Beitr&auml;ge
+ zur &AElig;tiologie der Psychopathia Sexualis</i>, 1902, vol. i, p. 248).
+ Various &quot;feminine Strindbergs of the woman movement,&quot; as they
+ have been termed, displayed marked hostility to men. Anna R&uuml;ling
+ claims that <a name='2_Page_263'></a>many leaders of the movement, from the outset until
+ today, have been inverted. Hirschfeld, however (<i>Die
+ Homosexualit&auml;t</i>, p. 500), after giving special attention to the
+ matter, concludes that, alike among English suffragettes and in
+ the German Verein f&uuml;r Frauenstimmrecht, the percentage of inverts
+ is less than 10 per cent. </p></div>
+
+<hr />
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_137'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_137'>[137]</a> Catharina Margaretha Lincken, who married another woman,
+somewhat after the manner of the Hungarian Countess Sarolta Vay (<i>i.e.</i>,
+with the aid of an artificial male organ), was condemned to death for
+sodomy, and executed in 1721 at the age of 27 (F. C. M&uuml;ller, &quot;Ein weiterer
+Fall von contr&auml;rer Sexualempfindung,&quot; <i>Friedrich's Bl&auml;tter f&uuml;r
+Gerichtliche Medizin</i>, Heft 4, 1891). The most fully investigated case of
+sexual inversion in a woman in modern times is that of Countess Sarolta
+Vay (<i>Friedrich's Bl&auml;tter</i>, Heft, 1, 1891; also Krafft-Ebing,
+<i>Psychopathia Sexualis</i>, Eng. trans. of 10th. ed., 416-427; also
+summarized in Appendix E of earlier editions of the present Study).
+Sarolta always dressed as a man, and went through a pseudo-marriage with a
+girl who was ignorant of the real sex of her &quot;husband.&quot; She was acquitted
+and allowed to return home and continue dressing as a man.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_138'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_138'>[138]</a> Anna R&uuml;ling has some remarks on this point, <i>Jahrbuch f&uuml;r
+sexuelle Zwischenstufen</i>, vol. vii, 1905, p. 141 <i>et seq.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_139'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_139'>[139]</a> This, of course, by no means necessarily indicates the
+existence of sexual inversion, any more than the presence of feminine
+traits in distinguished men. I have elsewhere pointed out (<i>e.g.</i>, <i>Man
+and Woman</i>, 5th ed., 1915, p. 488) that genius in either sex frequently
+involves the coexistence of masculine, feminine, and infantile traits.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_140'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_140'>[140]</a> Various references to Queen Hatschepsu are given by
+Hirschfeld (<i>Die Homosexualit&auml;t</i>, p. 739). Hirschfeld's not severely
+critical list of distinguished homosexual persons includes 18 women. It
+would not be difficult to add others.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_141'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_141'>[141]</a> Sophie Hochstetter, in a study of Queen Christina in the
+<i>Jahrbuch f&uuml;r sexuelle Zwischenstufen</i> (vol. ix, 1908, p. 168 <i>et seq.</i>),
+regards her as bisexual, while H. J. Schouten (<i>Monatsschrift f&uuml;r
+Kriminalanthropologie</i>, 1912, Heft 6) concludes that she was homosexual,
+and believes that it was Monaldeschi's knowledge on this point which led
+her to instigate his murder.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_142'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_142'>[142]</a> <i>Cf.</i> Hans Freimark, <i>Helena Petrovna Blavatsky</i>; Levetzow,
+&quot;Louise Michel,&quot; <i>Jahrbuch f&uuml;r sexuelle Zwischenstufen</i>, vol. vii, 1905,
+p. 307 <i>et seq.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_143'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_143'>[143]</a> Rosa Bonheur, the painter, is a specially conspicuous
+example of pronounced masculinity in, a woman of genius. She frequently
+dressed as a man, and when dressed as a woman her masculine air
+occasionally attracted the attention of the police. See Theodore Stanton's
+biography.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_144'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_144'>[144]</a> There is some difference of opinion as to whether there is
+less real delinquency among women (see Havelock Ellis, <i>Man and Woman</i>,
+6th ed., 1915, p. 469), but we are here concerned with judicial
+criminality.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_145'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_145'>[145]</a> This apparently widespread opinion is represented by the
+remark of a young man in the eighteenth century (concerning the Lesbian
+friend of the woman he wishes to marry), quoted in the Comte de Tilly's
+<i>Souvenirs</i>: &quot;I confess that that is a kind of rivalry which causes me no
+annoyance; on the contrary it amuses me, and I am immoral enough to laugh
+at it.&quot; That attitude of the educated and refined was not probably shared
+by the populace. Madame de Lamballe, who was guillotined at the
+Revolution, was popularly regarded as a tribade, and it was said that on
+this account her charming head received the special insults of the mob.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_146'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_146'>[146]</a> Havelock Ellis, <i>Man and Woman</i>, 5th ed., 1915, especially
+chapters xiii and xv.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_147'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_147'>[147]</a> Karsch (<i>Jahrbuch f&uuml;r sexuelle Zwischenstufen</i>, vol. iii,
+1901, pp. 85-9) brings together some passages concerning homosexuality in
+women among various peoples.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_148'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_148'>[148]</a> Gandavo, quoted by Lomaeco, <i>Archivio per l'Antropologia</i>,
+1889, fasc. 1.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_149'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_149'>[149]</a> <i>Journal Anthropological Institute</i>, July-Dec., 1904, p.
+342.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_150'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_150'>[150]</a> G. H. Lowie, &quot;The Assiniboine,&quot; Am. Museum of Nat. Hist.,
+<i>Anthropological Papers</i>, New York, 1909, vol. xiv, p. 223; W. Jones, &quot;Fox
+Texts,&quot; <i>Publications of Am. Ethnological Soc.</i>, Leyden, 1907, vol. i, p.
+151; quoted by D. C. McMurtrie, &quot;A Legend of Lesbian Love Among the North
+American Indians,&quot; <i>Urologic Review</i>, April, 1914.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_151'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_151'>[151]</a> <i>Zeitschrift f&uuml;r Ethnologie</i>, Heft 6, 1899, p. 669.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_152'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_152'>[152]</a> I. Bloch, <i>Die Prostitution</i>, vol. i, pp. 180, 181.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_153'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_153'>[153]</a> Corre, <i>Crime en Pays Creoles</i>, 1889.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_154'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_154'>[154]</a> In a Spanish prison, some years ago, when a new governor
+endeavored to reform the homosexual manners of the women, the latter made
+his post so uncomfortable that he was compelled to resign. Salillas (<i>Vida
+Penal en Espa&ntilde;a</i>) asserts that all the evidence shows the extraordinary
+expansion of Lesbian love in prisons. The <i>mujeres hombrunas</i> receive
+masculine names&mdash;Pepe, Chulo, Bernardo, Valiente; new-comers are
+surrounded in the court-yard by a crowd of lascivious women, who overwhelm
+them with honeyed compliments and gallantries and promises of protection,
+the most robust virago having most successes; a single day and night
+complete the initiation.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_155'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_155'>[155]</a> Even among Arab prostitutes it is found, according to
+Kocher, though among Arab women generally it is rare.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_156'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_156'>[156]</a> <i>Monatsschrift f&uuml;r Harnkrankheiten</i>, Nov., 1905; in his
+<i>Tribadie Berlins</i>, he states that among 3000 prostitutes at least ten per
+cent. were homosexual. See also Parent-Duch&acirc;telet, <i>De la Prostitution</i>,
+3d ed., vol. i, pp. 159, 169; Martineau, <i>Les D&eacute;formations vulvaires et
+anales</i>; and Iwan Bloch, <i>Beitr&auml;ge zur &AElig;tiologie der Psychopathia
+Sexualis</i>, 1902, vol. i, p. 244.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_157'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_157'>[157]</a> Hirschfeld, <i>Die Homosexualit&auml;t</i>, p. 330.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_158'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_158'>[158]</a> Eulenburg, <i>Sexuelle Neuropathie</i>, p. 144.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_159'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_159'>[159]</a> See vol. vi of these <i>Studies</i>, &quot;Sex in Relation to
+Society,&quot; ch. vii.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_160'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_160'>[160]</a> The prostitute has sometimes been regarded as a special
+type, analogous to the instinctive criminal. This point of view has been
+specially emphasized by Lombroso and Ferrero, <i>La Donna Delinquente</i>.
+Apart from this, these authors regard homosexuality among prostitutes as
+due to the following causes (p. 410 <i>et seq.</i>): (<i>a</i>) excessive and often
+unnatural venery; (<i>b</i>) confinement in a prison, with separation from men;
+(<i>c</i>) close association with the same sex, such as is common in brothels;
+(<i>d</i>) maturity and old age, inverting the secondary sexual characters and
+predisposing to sexual inversion; (<i>e</i>) disgust of men produced by a
+prostitute's profession, combined with the longing for love. For cases of
+homosexuality in American prostitutes, see D. McMurtrie, <i>Lancet-Clinic</i>,
+Nov. 2, 1912.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_161'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_161'>[161]</a> Thus Casanova, who knew several nuns intimately, refers to
+homosexuality as a childish sin so common in convents that confessors
+imposed no penance for it (<i>M&eacute;moires</i>, ed. Garnier, vol. iv, p. 517).
+Homosexuality in convent schools has been studied by Mercante, <i>Archivos
+di Psiquiatria</i>, 1905, pp. 22-30.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_162'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_162'>[162]</a> I quote the following from a private letter written in
+Switzerland: &quot;An English resident has told me that his wife has lately had
+to send away her parlor-maid (a pretty girl) because she was always taking
+in strange women to sleep with her. I asked if she had been taken from
+hotel service, and found, as I expected, that she had. But neither my
+friend nor his wife suspected the real cause of these nocturnal visits.&quot;</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_163'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_163'>[163]</a> For a series of cases of affection of girls for girls, in
+apparently normal subjects in the United States, see, <i>e.g.</i>, Lancaster,
+&quot;The Psychology and Pedagogy of Adolescence,&quot; <i>Pedagogical Seminary</i>,
+July, 1897, p. 88; also, for school friendships between girls, exactly
+resembling those between boys and girls, Theodate L. Smith, &quot;Types of
+Adolescent Affection,&quot; <i>ib.</i>, June, 1904, pp. 193, 195.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_164'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_164'>[164]</a> Obici and Marchesini, <i>Le &quot;Amicizie&quot; di Collegio</i>, Rome,
+1898.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_165'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_165'>[165]</a> See Appendix B, in which I have briefly summarized the
+result of the investigation by Obici and Marchesini, and also brought
+forward observations concerning English colleges.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_166'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_166'>[166]</a> An interesting ancient example of a woman with an
+irresistible impulse to adopt men's clothing and lead a man's life, but
+who did not, so far as is known, possess any sexual impulses, is that of
+Mary Frith, commonly called Moll Cutpurse, who lived in London at the
+beginning of the seventeenth century. <i>The Life and Death of Mrs. Mary
+Frith</i> appeared in 1662; Middleton and Rowley also made her the heroine of
+their delightful comedy, <i>The Roaring Girl (Mermaid Series, Middleton's
+Plays</i>, volume ii), somewhat idealizing her, however. She seems to have
+belonged to a neurotic and eccentric stock; &quot;each of the family,&quot; her
+biographer says, &quot;had his peculiar freak.&quot; As a child she only cared for
+boys' games, and could never adapt herself to any woman's avocations. &quot;She
+had a natural abhorrence to the tending of children.&quot; Her disposition was
+altogether masculine; &quot;she was not for mincing obscenity, but would talk
+freely, whatever came uppermost.&quot; She never had any children, and was not
+taxed with debauchery: &quot;No man can say or affirm that ever she had a
+sweetheart or any such fond thing to dally with her;&quot; a mastiff was the
+only living thing she cared for. Her life was not altogether honest, but
+not so much from any organic tendency to crime, it seems, as because her
+abnormal nature and restlessness made her an outcast. She was too fond of
+drink, and is said to have been the first woman who smoked tobacco.
+Nothing is said or suggested of any homosexual practices, but we see
+clearly here what may be termed the homosexual diathesis.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_167'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_167'>[167]</a> Hirschfeld, <i>Die Homosexualit&auml;t</i>, p. 137.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_168'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_168'>[168]</a> S. Weissenberg, <i>Zeitschrift f&uuml;r Ethnologie</i>, 1892, Heft 4,
+p. 280.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_169'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_169'>[169]</a> This case was described by Gasparini, <i>Archivio di
+Psichiatria</i>, 1908, fasc. 1-2.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_170'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_170'>[170]</a> Bringing together ten cases of inverted women from various
+sources (including the three original cases mentioned above), in only four
+were the sexual organs normal; in the others they were more or less
+undeveloped.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_171'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_171'>[171]</a> Homosexual persons generally, male and female, unlike the
+heterosexual, are apt to feel more modesty with persons of the same sex
+than with those of the opposite sex. See, <i>e.g.</i>, Hirschfeld, <i>Die
+Homosexualit&auml;t</i>, p. 76.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_172'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_172'>[172]</a> &#922;&#961;&#965;&#960;&#964;&#8049;&#948;&#953;&#945;, vol. vi, p. 197.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_173'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_173'>[173]</a> The term &quot;cunnilinctus&quot; was suggested to me by the late Dr.
+J. Bonus, and I have ever since used it; the Latin authors commonly used
+&quot;cunnilingus&quot; for the actor, but had no corresponding term for the action.
+Hirschfeld has lately used the term &quot;cunnilinctio&quot; in the same sense, but
+such a formation is quite inadmissible. For information on the classic
+terms for this perversion, see, <i>e.g.</i>, Iwan Bloch, <i>Ursprung der
+Syphilis</i>, vol. ii, p. 612 <i>et seq.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_174'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_174'>[174]</a> Casanova, <i>M&eacute;moires</i>, ed. Gamier, vol. iv, p. 597.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_175'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_175'>[175]</a> Hirschfeld deals in a full and authoritative manner with
+the differential diagnosis of inversion and the other groups of
+transitional sexuality in <i>Die Homosexualit&auml;t</i>, ch. ii; also in his fully
+illustrated book <i>Geschlechts&uuml;berg&auml;nge</i>, 1905.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_176'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_176'>[176]</a> Havelock Ellis, &quot;Auto-erotism,&quot; in vol. i of these
+<i>Studies</i>; Iwan Bloch, <i>Ursprung der Syphilis</i>, vol. ii, p. 589; <i>ib.</i>,
+<i>Die Prostitution</i>, vol, i, pp. 385-6; for early references, Crusius,
+<i>Untersuchungen zu den Mimiamben der Herondas</i>, pp. 129-30.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_177'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_177'>[177]</a> I have found a notice of a similar case in France, during
+the sixteenth century, in Montaigne's <i>Journal du Voyage en Italie en</i>
+1850 (written by his secretary); it took place near Vitry le Fran&ccedil;ois.
+Seven or eight girls belonging to Chaumont, we are told, resolved to dress
+and to work as men; one of these came to Vitry to work as a weaver, and
+was looked upon as a well-conditioned young man, and liked by everyone. At
+Vitry she became betrothed to a woman, but, a quarrel arising, no marriage
+took place. Afterward &quot;she fell in love with a woman whom she married, and
+with whom she lived for four or five months, to the wife's great
+contentment, it is said; but, having been recognized by some one from
+Chaumont, and brought to justice, she was condemned to be hanged. She said
+she would even prefer this to living again as a girl, and was hanged for
+using illicit inventions to supply the defects of her sex&quot; (<i>Journal</i>, ed.
+by d'Ancona, 1889, p. 11).</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_178'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_178'>[178]</a> Roux, <i>Bulletin Soci&eacute;t&eacute; d'Anthropologie</i>, 1905, No. 3. Roux
+knew a Comarian woman who, at the age of 50, after her husband's death,
+became homosexual and made herself an artificial penis which she used with
+younger women.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_179'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_179'>[179]</a> Hirschfeld, <i>Die Homosexualit&auml;t</i>, p. 47.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_180'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_180'>[180]</a> There are few traces of feminine homosexuality in English
+social history of the past. In Charles the Second's Court, the <i>M&eacute;moires
+de Ghrammont</i> tell us, Miss Hobart was credited with Lesbian tendencies.
+&quot;Soon the rumor, true or false, of this singularity spread through the
+court. They were gross enough there never to have heard of that refinement
+of ancient Greece in the tastes of tenderness, and the idea came into
+their heads that the illustrious Hobart, who seemed so affectionate to
+pretty women, must be different from what she appeared.&quot; This passage is
+interesting because it shows us how rare was the exception. A century
+later, however, homosexuality among English women seems to have been
+regarded by the French as common, and Bacchaumont, on January 1, 1773,
+when recording that Mlle. Heinel of the Opera was settling in England,
+added: &quot;Her taste for women will there find attractive satisfaction, for
+though Paris furnishes many tribades it is said that London is herein
+superior.&quot;</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_181'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_181'>[181]</a> &quot;I believe,&quot; writes a well-informed American correspondent,
+&quot;that sexual inversion is increasing among Americans&mdash;both men and
+women&mdash;and the obvious reasons are: first, the growing independence of the
+women, their lessening need for marriage; secondly, the nervous strain
+that business competition has brought upon the whole nation. In a word,
+the rapidly increasing masculinity in women and the unhealthy nervous
+systems of the men offer the ideal factors for the production of sexual
+inversion in their children.&quot;</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_182'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_182'>[182]</a> Homosexual women, like homosexual men, now insert
+advertisements in the newspapers, seeking a &quot;friend.&quot; N&auml;cke
+(&quot;Zeitungsannoncen von weiblichen Homosexuellen,&quot; <i>Archiv f&uuml;r
+Kriminal-Anthropologie</i>, 1902, p. 225) brought together from Munich
+newspapers a collection of such advertisements, most of which were fairly
+unambiguous: &quot;Actress with modern ideas desires to know rich lady with
+similar views, for the sake of friendly relations, etc.;&quot; &quot;Young lady of
+19, a pretty blonde, seeks another like herself for walks, theatre, etc.,&quot;
+and so on.</p></div>
+
+
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<h3><a name='2_CHAPTER_V'></a><a name='2_Page_264'></a>CHAPTER V.&mdash;THE NATURE OF SEXUAL INVERSION.</h3>
+
+<div class='blkquot'><p>Analysis of Histories&mdash;Race&mdash;Heredity&mdash;General Health&mdash;First Appearance of
+Homosexual Impulse&mdash;Sexual Precocity and Hyperesthesia&mdash;Suggestion and
+Other Exciting Causes of Inversion&mdash;Masturbation&mdash;Attitude Toward
+Women&mdash;Erotic Dreams&mdash;Methods of Sexual Relationship&mdash;Pseudo-sexual
+Attraction&mdash;Physical Sexual Abnormalities&mdash;Artistic and Other
+Aptitudes&mdash;Moral Attitude of the Invert.</p></div>
+
+<p>Before stating briefly my own conclusions as to the nature of sexual
+inversion, I propose to analyze the facts brought out in the histories
+which I have been able to study.<a name='2_FNanchor_183'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_183'><sup>[183]</sup></a></p>
+
+
+<p><b>RACE.&mdash;</b>All my cases, 80 in number, are British and American, 20 living in
+the United States and the rest being British. Ancestry, from the point of
+view of race, was not made a matter of special investigation. It appears,
+however, that at least 44 are English or mainly English; at least 10 are
+Scotch or of Scotch extraction; 2 are Irish and 4 others largely Irish; 4
+have German fathers or mothers; another is of German descent on both
+sides, while 2 others are of remote German extraction; 2 are partly, and 1
+entirely, French; 2 have a Portuguese strain, and at least 2 are more or
+less Jewish. Except the apparently frequent presence of the German
+element, there is nothing remarkable in this ancestry.</p>
+
+
+<p><b>HEREDITY.&mdash;</b>It is always difficult to deal securely with the significance
+of heredity, or even to establish a definite basis of facts. I have by no
+means escaped this difficulty, for in some cases I have not even had an
+opportunity of cross-examining the subjects whose histories I have
+obtained. Still, the facts, so far <a name='2_Page_265'></a>as they emerge, have some interest. I
+possess some record of heredity in 62 of my cases. Of these, not less than
+24, or in the proportion of nearly 39 per cent., assert that they have
+reason to believe that other cases of inversion have occurred in their
+families, and, while in some it is only a strong suspicion, in others
+there is no doubt whatever. In one case there is reason to suspect
+inversion on both sides. Usually the inverted relatives have been
+brothers, sisters, cousins, or uncles. In one case a bisexual son seems to
+have had a bisexual father.</p>
+
+<div class='blkquot'><p>This hereditary character of inversion (which was denied by
+ N&auml;cke) is a fact of great significance, and, as it occurs in
+ cases with which I am well acquainted, I can have no doubt
+ concerning the existence of the tendency. The influence of
+ suggestion may often be entirely excluded, especially when the
+ persons are of different sex. Both Krafft-Ebing and Moll noted a
+ similar tendency. Von R&ouml;mer states that in one-third of his cases
+ there was inversion in other members of the family. Hirschfeld
+ also found that there is a relatively high proportion of cases of
+ family inversion. </p></div>
+
+<p>Twenty-six, so far as can be ascertained, belong to reasonably healthy
+families; minute investigation would probably reduce the number of these,
+and it is noteworthy that even in some of the healthy families there was
+only one child born of the parents' marriage. In 28 cases there is more or
+less frequency of morbidity or abnormality&mdash;eccentricity, alcoholism,
+neurasthenia, insanity, or nervous disease&mdash;on one or both sides, in
+addition to inversion or apart from it. In some of these cases the
+inverted offspring is the outcome of the union, of a very healthy with a
+thoroughly morbid stock; in some others there is a minor degree of
+abnormality on both sides.</p>
+
+
+<p><b>GENERAL HEALTH.&mdash;</b>It is possible to speak with more certainty of the health
+of the individual than of that of his family. Of the 80 cases, 53&mdash;or
+about two-thirds&mdash;may be said to enjoy good, and sometimes even very good,
+health, though occasionally there is some slight qualification to be made.
+In 22 cases the health is delicate, or at best only fair; in these cases
+there is sometimes a tendency to consumption, and often marked
+neurasthenia and a more or less unbalanced temperament. Four <a name='2_Page_266'></a>cases are
+morbid to a considerable degree; the remaining case has had insane
+delusions which required treatment in an asylum. A considerable
+proportion, included among those as having either good or fair health, may
+be described as of extremely nervous temperament, and in most cases they
+so describe themselves; a certain proportion of these combine great
+physical and, especially, mental energy with this nervousness; all these
+are doubtless of neurotic temperament.<a name='2_FNanchor_184'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_184'><sup>[184]</sup></a> Very few can be said to be
+conspicuously lacking in energy. On the whole, therefore, a large
+proportion of these inverted individuals are passing through life in an
+unimpaired state of health, which enables them to do at least their fair
+share of work in the world; in a considerable proportion of my cases that
+work is of high intellectual value. Only in 5 cases, it will be seen, or
+at most 6, can the general health be said to be distinctly bad.</p>
+
+<p>This result may, perhaps, seem surprising. It must, however, be remembered
+that my cases do not, on the whole, represent the class which alone the
+physician is usually able to bring forward: <i>i.e.</i>, the sexual inverts who
+are suffering from a more or less severe degree of complete nervous
+breakdown.</p>
+
+<div class='blkquot'><p>There is no frequent relationship between homosexuality and
+ insanity, and such homosexuality as is found in asylums is mostly
+ of a spurious character. This point was specially emphasized by
+ N&auml;cke (<i>e.g.</i>, &quot;Homosexualit&auml;t und Psychose,&quot; <i>Zeitschrift f&uuml;r
+ Psichiatrie</i>, vol. lxviii, No. 3, 1911). He quoted the opinions
+ of various distinguished alienists as to the rarity with which
+ they had met genuine inverts, and recorded his own experiences.
+ He had never met a genuine invert in the asylum throughout his
+ extensive experience, although he was quite willing to admit that
+ there may be unrecognized inverts in asylums, and one patient
+ informed him, after leaving, that he was inverted, and had
+ attracted the attention of the police both before and afterward,
+ though nothing happened in the asylum. Among 1500 patients in the
+ asylum during one year, active <i>pedicatio</i> occurred in about 1
+ per cent. of cases, these patients being frequently idiots or
+ <a name='2_Page_267'></a>imbeciles and at the same time masturbators, solitary or mutual.
+ Hirschfeld informed N&auml;cke that, among homosexual persons,
+ hysterical conditions (not usually on hereditary basis) are
+ fairly common, and neurasthenia of high degree decidedly
+ frequent, but though stages of depression are common he had never
+ seen pure melancholia and very seldom mania, but paranoiac
+ delusional ideas frequently, and he agreed with Bryan of
+ Broadmoor that religious delusions are not uncommon. General
+ paralysis occurs, but is comparatively rare, and the same may be
+ said of dementia pr&aelig;cox. On the whole, although Hirschfeld was
+ unable to give precise figures, there was no reason whatever to
+ suppose an abnormal prevalence of insanity. This was N&auml;cke's own
+ view. It is quite true, N&auml;cke concluded, that homosexual actions
+ occur in every form of psychosis, especially in congenital and
+ secondary dements, and at periods of excitement, but we are here
+ more concerned with &quot;pseudo-homosexuality&quot; than with true
+ inversion. Hirschfeld finds that 75 per cent. inverts are of
+ sound heredity; this seems too large a proportion; in any case
+ allowance must be made for differences in method and minuteness
+ of investigation. </p></div>
+
+<p>I am fairly certain that thorough investigation would very considerably
+enlarge the proportion of cases with morbid heredity. At the same time
+this enlargement would be chiefly obtained by bringing minor abnormalities
+to the front, and it would then have to be shown how far the families of
+average or normal persons are free from such abnormalities. The question
+is sometimes asked: What family is free from neuropathic taint? At present
+it is difficult to answer this question precisely. There is good ground to
+believe that a fairly large proportion of families are free from such
+taint. In any case it seems probable that the families to which the
+inverted belong do not usually present such profound signs of nervous
+degeneration as we were formerly led to suppose. What we vaguely call
+&quot;eccentricity&quot; is common among them; insanity is much rarer.</p>
+
+
+<p><b>FIRST APPEARANCE OF HOMOSEXUAL INSTINCT.&mdash;</b>Out of 72 cases, in 8 the
+instinct veered round to the same sex in adult age or at all events after
+puberty; in 3 of these there had been a love-disappointment with a woman;
+no other cause than this can be assigned for the transition; but it is
+noteworthy that in at least 2 of these cases the sexual instinct is
+undeveloped or <a name='2_Page_268'></a>morbidly weak, while a third individual is of somewhat
+weak <i>physique</i>, and another has long been in delicate health. In a
+further case, also somewhat morbid, the development was rather more
+complicated.</p>
+
+<p>In 64 cases, or in a proportion of 88 per cent., the abnormal instinct
+began in early life, without previous attraction to the opposite sex.<a name='2_FNanchor_185'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_185'><sup>[185]</sup></a>
+In 27 of these it dates from about puberty, usually beginning at school.
+In 39 cases the tendency began before puberty, between the ages of 5 and
+11, usually between 7 and 9, sometimes as early as the subject can
+remember. It must not be supposed that, in these numerous cases of the
+early appearance of homosexuality, the manifestations were of a
+specifically physical character, although erections are noted in a few
+cases. For the most part sexual manifestations at this early age, whether
+homosexual or heterosexual, are purely psychic.<a name='2_FNanchor_186'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_186'><sup>[186]</sup></a></p>
+
+
+<p><b>SEXUAL PRECOCITY AND HYPERESTHESIA.&mdash;</b>It is a fact of considerable interest
+and significance that in so large a number of my cases there was distinct
+precocity of the sexual emotions, both on the physical and psychic sides.
+There can be little doubt that, as many previous observers have found,
+inversion tends strongly to be associated with sexual precocity. I think
+it may further be said that sexual precocity tends to encourage the
+inverted habit where it exists. Why this should be so is obvious, <a name='2_Page_269'></a>if we
+believe&mdash;as there is some reason for believing&mdash;that at an early age the
+sexual instinct is comparatively undifferentiated in its manifestations.
+The precocious accentuation of the sexual impulse leads to definite
+crystallization of the emotions at a premature stage. It must be added
+that precocious sexual energy is likely to remain feeble, and that a
+feeble sexual energy adapts itself more easily to homosexual
+relationships, in which there is no definite act to be accomplished, than
+to normal relationships. It is difficult to say how many of my cases
+exhibit sexual weakness. In 6 or 7 it is evident, and it may be suspected
+in many others, especially in those who are, and often describe themselves
+as, &quot;sensitive&quot; or &quot;nervous,&quot; as well as in those whose sexual development
+was very late. In many cases there is marked hyperesthesia, or irritable
+weakness. Hyperesthesia simulates strength, and, while there can be little
+doubt that some sexual inverts (and more especially bisexuals) do possess
+unusual sexual energy, in others it is but apparent; the frequent
+repetition of seminal emissions, for example, may be the result of
+weakness as well as of strength. It must be added that this irritability
+of the sexual centers is, in a considerable proportion of inverts,
+associated with marked emotional tendencies to affection and
+self-sacrifice. In the extravagance of his affection and devotion, it has
+been frequently observed, the male invert resembles many normal women.</p>
+
+
+<p><b>SUGGESTION AND OTHER EXCITING CAUSES OF INVERSION.&mdash;</b>In 18 of my cases it
+is possible that some event, or special environment, in early life had
+more or less influence in turning the sexual instinct into homosexual
+channels, or in calling out a latent inversion. In 3 cases a
+disappointment in normal love seems to have produced a profound nervous
+and emotional shock, acting, as we seem bound to admit, on a predisposed
+organism, and developing a fairly permanent tendency to inversion. In 8
+cases there was seduction by an older person, but in at least 4 or 5 of
+these there was already a well-marked predisposition. In at least 8 other
+cases, example, usually at school, may probably be regarded as having
+exerted some influence. It is noteworthy that <a name='2_Page_270'></a>in very few of my cases can
+we trace the influence of any definite &quot;suggestion,&quot; as asserted by
+Schrenck-Notzing, who believes that, in the causation of sexual inversion
+(as undoubtedly in the causation of erotic fetichism), we must give the
+first place to &quot;accidental factors of education and external influence.&quot;
+He records the case of a little boy who innocently gazed in curiosity at
+the penis of his father who was urinating, and had his ears boxed, whence
+arose a train of thought and feeling which resulted in complete sexual
+inversion. In two of the cases I have reported we have parallel incidents,
+and here we see clearly that the homosexual tendency already existed. I do
+not question the occurrence of such incidents, but I refuse to accept them
+as supplying the causation of inversion, and in so doing I am supported by
+all the evidence I am able to obtain. I am in agreement with a
+correspondent who wrote:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class='blkquot'><p>&quot;Considering that all boys are exposed to the same order of
+ suggestions (sight of a man's naked organs, sleeping with a man,
+ being handled by a man), and that only a few of them become
+ sexually perverted, I think it reasonable to conclude that those
+ few were previously constituted to receive the suggestion. In
+ fact, suggestion seems to play exactly the same part in the
+ normal and abnormal awakening of sex.&quot; </p></div>
+
+<p>I would go so far as to assert that for normal boys and girls the
+developed sexual organs of the adult man or woman&mdash;from their size,
+hairiness, and the mystery which envelops them&mdash;nearly always exert a
+certain fascination, whether of attraction or horror.<a name='2_FNanchor_187'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_187'><sup>[187]</sup></a> But this has no
+connection with homosexuality, and scarcely with sexuality at all. Thus,
+in one case known to me, a boy of 6 or 7 took pleasure in caressing the
+organs of another boy, twice his own age, who remained passive and
+indifferent; yet this child grew up without ever manifesting any
+homosexual instinct. The seed of suggestion can only develop when it falls
+on a suitable soil. If it is to act on a fairly normal nature the
+perverted suggestion must be very powerful or iterated, and <a name='2_Page_271'></a>even then its
+influence will probably only be temporary, disappearing in the presence of
+the normal stimulus.<a name='2_FNanchor_188'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_188'><sup>[188]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>Not only is &quot;suggestion&quot; unnecessary to develop a sexual impulse already
+rooted in the organism, but when exerted in an opposite direction it is
+powerless to divert that impulse. We see this illustrated in several of
+the cases whose histories I have presented. Thus in one case a boy was
+seduced by the housemaid at the age of 14 and even derived pleasure from
+the girl, yet none the less the native homosexual instinct asserted itself
+a year later. In another case heterosexual suggestions were offered and
+accepted in early life, yet, notwithstanding, the homosexual attraction
+was slowly evolved from within.</p>
+
+<p>I have, therefore, but little to say of the influence of suggestion, which
+was formerly exalted to a position of the first importance in books on
+sexual inversion. This is not because I underestimate the great part
+played by suggestion in many fields of normal and abnormal life. It is
+because I have been able to find but few decided traces of it in sexual
+inversion. In many cases, doubtless, there may be some slight elements of
+suggestion in developing the inversion, though they cannot be traced.<a name='2_FNanchor_189'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_189'><sup>[189]</sup></a>
+Their importance seems usually questionable even when <a name='2_Page_272'></a>they are
+discovered. Take Schrenck-Notzing's case of the little boy whose ears were
+boxed for what his father considered improper curiosity. I find it
+difficult to realize that a mighty suggestion can thereby be generated
+unless a strong emotion exists for it to unite with; in that case the seed
+falls on prepared soil. Is the wide prevalence of normal sexuality due to
+the fact that so many little boys have had their ears boxed for taking
+naughty liberties with women? If so, I am quite prepared to accept
+Schrenck-Notzing's explanation as a complete account of the matter. I know
+of one case, indeed, in which an element of what may fairly be called
+suggestion can be detected. It is that of a physician who had always been
+on very friendly terms with men, but had sexual relations exclusively with
+women, finding fair satisfaction, until the confessions of an inverted
+patient one day came to him as a revelation; thereafter he adopted
+inverted practices and ceased to find any attraction in women. But even in
+this case, as I understand the matter, suggestion merely served to reveal
+his own nature to the man. For a physician to adopt the perverted habits
+which the visit of a chance patient suggests to him can scarcely be a
+phenomenon of pure suggestion. We have no reason to suppose that this
+physician practised every perversion he heard of from patients; he adopted
+that which fitted his own nature.<a name='2_FNanchor_190'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_190'><sup>[190]</sup></a> In another case homosexual advances
+were made to a youth and accepted, but he had already been attracted to
+men in childhood. Again, in another case, there <a name='2_Page_273'></a>were homosexual
+influences in the boyhood of a subject who became bisexual, but as the
+subject's father was of similar bisexual temperament we can attach no
+potency to the mere suggestions. In another case we find homosexual
+influence in childhood, but the child was already delicate, shy, nervous,
+and feminine, clearly possessing a temperament predestined to develop in a
+homosexual direction.</p>
+
+<div class='blkquot'><p>The irresistible potency of the inner impulse is well illustrated
+ in a case presented by Hirschfeld and Burchard: &quot;My daughter
+ Erna,&quot; said the subject's mother, &quot;showed boyish inclinations at
+ the age of 3, and they increased from year to year. She never
+ played with dolls, only with tin soldiers, guns, and castles. She
+ would climb trees and jump ditches; she made friends with the
+ drivers of all the carts that came to our house and they would
+ place her on the horse's back. The annual circus was a joy to her
+ for all the year. Even as a child of 4 she was so fearless on
+ horseback that lookers-on shouted Bravo! and all declared she was
+ a born horsewoman. It was her greatest wish to be a boy. She
+ would wear her elder brother's clothes all day, notwithstanding
+ her grandmother's indignation. Cycling, gymnastics, boating,
+ swimming, were her passion, and she showed skill in them. As she
+ grew older she hated prettily adorned hats and clothes. I had
+ much trouble with her for she would not wear pretty things. The
+ older she grew the more her masculine and decided ways developed.
+ This excited much outcry and offence. People found my daughter
+ unfeminine and disagreeable, but all my trouble and exhortations
+ availed nothing to change her.&quot; Now this young woman whom all the
+ influences of a normal feminine environment failed to render
+ feminine was not physiologically a woman at all; the case proved
+ to be the unique instance of an individual possessing all the
+ external characteristics of a woman combined with internal
+ testicular tissue capable of emitting true masculine semen
+ through the feminine urethra. No suggestions of the environment
+ could suffice to overcome this fundamental fact of internal
+ constitution. (Hirschfeld and Burchard, &quot;Spermasekretion aus
+ einer weiblichen Harnr&ouml;hre,&quot; <i>Deutsche medizinische
+ Wochenschrift</i>, No. 52, 1911.) </p></div>
+
+<p>I may here quote three American cases (not previously published), for
+which I am indebted to Prof. G. Frank Lydston, of Chicago. They seem to me
+to illustrate the only kind of suggestions which play much part in the
+evolution of inversion. I give them in Dr. Lydston's words:&mdash;<a name='2_Page_274'></a></p>
+
+
+<div class='blkquot'><p><b>CASE I.&mdash;</b>A man, 45 years of age, attracted by the allusion to my
+ essay on &quot;Social Perversion&quot; contained in the English translation
+ of Krafft-Ebing's <i>Psychopathia Sexualis</i>, consulted me regarding
+ the possible cure of his condition. This individual was a finely
+ educated, very intelligent man, who was an excellent linguist,
+ had considerable musical ability, and was in the employ of a firm
+ whose business was such as to demand on the part of its employ&eacute;s
+ considerable legal acumen, clerical ability, and knowledge of
+ real-estate transactions. This man stated that at the age of
+ puberty, without any knowledge of perversity of sexual feeling,
+ he was thrown intimately in contact with males of more advanced
+ years, who took various means to excite his sexual passions, the
+ result being that perverted sexual practices were developed,
+ which were continued for a number of years. He thereafter noticed
+ an aversion to women. At the solicitations of his family he
+ finally married, without any very intelligent idea as to what, if
+ anything, might be expected of him in the marital relation.
+ Absolute impotence&mdash;indeed, repugnance for association with his
+ wife&mdash;was the lamentable sequence. A divorce was in contemplation
+ when, fortunately for all parties concerned, the wife suddenly
+ died. Being a man of more than ordinary intelligence, this
+ individual, prior to seeking my aid, had sought vainly for some
+ remedy for his unfortunate condition. He stated that he believed
+ there was an element of heredity in his case, his father having
+ been a dipsomaniac and one brother having died insane. He
+ nevertheless stated it to be his opinion that, notwithstanding
+ the hereditary taint, he would have been perfectly normal from a
+ sexual standpoint had it not been for acquired impressions at or
+ about the period of puberty. This man presented a typically
+ neurotic type of <i>physique</i>, complained of being intensely
+ nervous, was prematurely gray, of only fair stature, and had an
+ uncontrollable nystagmus, which, he said, had existed for some
+ fifteen years. As might be expected, treatment in this case was
+ of no avail. I began the use of hypnotic suggestion at the hands
+ of an expert professional hypnotist. The patient, being called
+ out of the State, finally gave up treatment, and I have no means
+ of knowing what his present condition is.</p>
+
+
+<p> <b>CASE II.&mdash;</b>A lady patient of mine who happened to be an actress,
+ and consequently a woman of the world, brought to me for an
+ opinion some correspondence which had passed between her younger
+ brother and a man living in another State, with whom he was on
+ quite intimate terms. In one of these letters various flying
+ trips to Chicago for the purpose of meeting the lad, who, by the
+ way, was only 17 years of age, were alluded to. It transpired
+ also, as evidenced by the letters, that on several occasions the
+ young lad had been taken on trips in Pullman <a name='2_Page_275'></a>cars by his friend,
+ who was a prominent railroad official. The character of the
+ correspondence was such as the average healthy man would address
+ to a woman with whom he was enamored. It seemed that the author
+ of the correspondence had applied to his boy affinity the name
+ Cinderella, and the protestations of passionate affection that
+ were made toward Cinderella certainly would have satisfied the
+ most exacting woman. The young lad subsequently made a confession
+ to me, and I put myself in correspondence with his male friend,
+ with the result that he called upon me and I obtained a full
+ history of the case. The method of indulgence in this case was
+ the usual one of oral masturbation, in which the lad was the
+ passive party. I was unable to obtain any definite data regarding
+ the family history of the elder individual in this case, but
+ understand that there was a taint of insanity in his family. He
+ himself was a robust, fine-looking man, above middle age, who was
+ well educated and very intelligent, as he necessarily must have
+ been, because of the prominent position he held with an important
+ railway company. I will state, as a matter of interest, that the
+ lad in this case, who is now 23 years of age, has recently
+ consulted me for <i>impotentia co&euml;undi</i>, manifesting a frigidity
+ for women, and, from the young man's statements, I am convinced
+ that he is well on the road to confirmed sexual perversion.</p>
+
+<p> An interesting point in this connection is that the young man's
+ sister, the actress already alluded to, has recently had an
+ attack of acute mania.</p>
+
+<p> I have had other unpublished cases that might be of interest, but
+ these two are somewhat classical, and typify to a greater or less
+ degree the majority of other cases. I will, however, mention one
+ other case, occurring in a woman.</p>
+
+
+<p> <b>CASE III.&mdash;</b>A married woman 40 years of age. Has been deserted by
+ her husband because of her perverted sexuality. Neurotic history
+ on both sides of the family, and several cases of insanity on
+ mother's side. In this case affinity for the same sex and
+ perverted desire for the opposite sex existed, a combination by
+ no means infrequent. Hypnotic suggestion tried, but without
+ success. Cause was evidently suggestion and example on the part
+ of another female pervert with whom she associated before her
+ marriage. Marriage was late, at age of 35. In all these cases
+ there was an element of what may be called suggestion, but it was
+ really much more than this; it was probably in each case active
+ seduction by an elder person of a predisposed younger person. It
+ will be observed that in each case there was, at the least, an
+ organic neurotic basis for suggestion and seduction to work on. I
+ cannot regard these cases as entitled to modify our attitude
+ toward suggestion. <a name='2_Page_276'></a></p></div>
+
+<p><b>MASTURBATION.&mdash;</b>Moreau believed that masturbation was a cause of sexual
+inversion, and Krafft-Ebing looked upon it as leading to all sorts of
+sexual perversions; the same opinion was currently repeated by many
+writers. It is not now accepted. Moll emphatically rejected the idea that
+masturbation can be the cause of inversion; N&auml;cke repeatedly denies that
+masturbation, any more than seduction, can ever produce true inversion;
+Hirschfeld attaches to it no etiological significance. Many years ago I
+gave special attention to this point and reached a similar conclusion.
+That masturbation, especially at an early age, may sometimes enfeeble the
+sexual activities, and aid the manifestations of inversion, I certainly
+believe. But beyond this there is little in the history of my male cases
+to indicate masturbation as a cause of inversion. It is true that 44 out
+of 51 admit that they have practised masturbation,&mdash;at all events,
+occasionally, or at some period in their lives,&mdash;and it is possible that
+this proportion is larger than that found among normal people. Even if so,
+however, it is not difficult to account for, bearing in mind the fact that
+the homosexual person has not the same opportunities as has the
+heterosexual person to gratify his instincts, and that masturbation may
+sometimes legitimately appear to him as the lesser of two evils.<a name='2_FNanchor_191'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_191'><sup>[191]</sup></a> Not
+only has masturbation been practised at no period in at least 7 of the
+cases (for concerning several I have no information), but in several
+others it was never practised until long after the homosexual instinct had
+appeared, in 1 case not till the age of 40, and then only occasionally. In
+at least 8 it was only practised at puberty; in at least 8, however, it
+began before the age of puberty; at least 9 left off before about the age
+of 20. Unfortunately, as yet, we have little definite evidence as to the
+prevalence and extent of masturbation among normal individuals. <a name='2_Page_277'></a></p>
+
+<p>Among the women masturbation is found in at least 5 cases out of 7. In 1
+case there was no masturbation until comparatively late in life, and then
+only at rare intervals and under exceptional circumstances. In another
+case, some years after the homosexual attraction had been experienced, it
+was practised, though not in excess, from the age of puberty for about
+four years, and then abandoned; during these years the physical sexual
+feelings were more imperative than they were afterward felt to be. In 2
+cases masturbation was learned spontaneously soon after puberty, and in 1
+of these practised in excess before the manifestations of inversion became
+definite. In all cases the subjects are emphatic in asserting that this
+practice neither led to, nor was caused by, the homosexual attraction,
+which they regard as a much higher feeling, and it must be added that the
+occasional practice of masturbation is very far from rare among fairly
+normal women.<a name='2_FNanchor_192'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_192'><sup>[192]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>While this is so, I am certainly inclined to believe that an early and
+excessive indulgence in masturbation, though not an adequate cause, is a
+favoring condition for the development of inversion, and that this is
+especially so in women. The sexual precocity indicated by early and
+excessive masturbation doubtless sometimes reveals an organism already
+predisposed to homosexuality. But, apart from this, when masturbation
+arises spontaneously at an early age on a purely physical basis it seems
+to tend to produce a divorce between the physical and the psychic aspects
+of sexual love. The sexual manifestations are all diverted into this
+physical direction, and the child is ignorant that such phenomena are
+normally allied to love; then, when a more spiritual attraction appears
+with adolescent development, this divorce is perpetuated. Instead of the
+physical and psychic feelings appearing together when the age for sexual
+attraction comes, the physical feelings are prematurely twisted from their
+natural end, and it becomes abnormally easy <a name='2_Page_278'></a>for a person of the same sex
+to step in and take the place rightfully belonging to a person of the
+opposite sex. This has certainly seemed to me the course of events in some
+cases I have observed.</p>
+
+
+<p><b>ATTITUDE TOWARD THE OPPOSITE SEX.&mdash;</b>In 17 cases (of whom 5 are married and
+others purposing to marry) there is sexual attraction to both sexes, a
+condition formerly called psycho-sexual hermaphroditism, but now more
+usually bisexuality. In such cases, although there is pleasure and
+satisfaction in relationships with both sexes, there is usually a greater
+degree of satisfaction in connection with one sex. Most of the bisexual
+prefer their own sex. It is curiously rare to find a person, whether man
+or woman, who by choice exercises relationships with both sexes and
+prefers the opposite sex. This would seem to indicate that the bisexual
+may really be inverts.</p>
+
+<p>In any case bisexuality merges imperceptibly into simple inversion. In at
+least 16 of 52 cases of simple inversion in men there has been connection
+with women, in some instances only once or twice, in others during several
+years, but it was always with an effort, or from a sense of duty and
+anxiety to be normal; they never experienced any real pleasure in the act,
+or sense of satisfaction after it. Four of these cases are married, but
+martial relationships usually ceased after a few years. At least four
+others were attracted to women when younger, but are not now; another once
+felt sexually attracted to a boyish woman, but never made any attempt to
+obtain any relationships with her; 3 or 4 others, again, have tried to
+have connection with women, but failed. The largest proportion of my cases
+have never had any sexual intimacy with the opposite sex,<a name='2_FNanchor_193'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_193'><sup>[193]</sup></a> and some of
+these experience what, in the case of the male <a name='2_Page_279'></a>invert, is sometimes
+called <i>horror femin&aelig;</i>. But, while woman as an object of sexual desire is
+in such cases disgusting to them, and it is usually difficult for a
+genuine invert to have connection with a woman except by setting up images
+of his own sex, for the most part inverts are capable of genuine
+friendships, irrespective of sex.</p>
+
+<p>It is, perhaps, not difficult to account for the horror&mdash;much stronger
+than that normally felt toward a person of the same sex&mdash;with which the
+invert often regards the sexual organs of persons of the opposite sex. It
+cannot be said that the sexual organs of either sex under the influence of
+sexual excitement are esthetically pleasing; they only become emotionally
+desirable through the parallel excitement of the beholder. When the
+absence of parallel excitement is accompanied in the beholder by the sense
+of unfamiliarity as in childhood, or by a neurotic hypersensitiveness, the
+conditions are present for the production of intense <i>horror femin&aelig;</i> or
+<i>horror masculis</i>, as the case may be. It is possible that, as Otto Rank
+argues in his interesting study, &quot;Die Naktheit im Sage und Dichtung,&quot; this
+horror of the sexual organs of the opposite sex, to some extent felt even
+by normal people, is embodied in the Melusine type of legend.<a name='2_FNanchor_194'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_194'><sup>[194]</sup></a></p>
+
+
+<p><b>EROTIC DREAMS.&mdash;</b>Our dreams follow, as a general rule, the impulses that
+stir our waking psychic life. The normal man or woman in sexual vigor
+dreams of loving a person of the opposite sex; the inverted man dreams of
+loving a man, the inverted woman of loving a woman.<a name='2_FNanchor_195'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_195'><sup>[195]</sup></a> Dreams thus have
+a certain value in diagnosis, more especially since there is less
+unwillingness to confess to a perverted dream than to a perverted action.</p>
+
+<p>Ulrichs first referred to the significance of the dreams of inverts. At a
+later period Moll pointed out that they have some value in diagnosis when
+we are not sure how far the inverted <a name='2_Page_280'></a>tendency is radical. Then N&auml;cke
+repeatedly emphasized the importance of dreams as constituting, he
+believed, the most delicate test we possess in the diagnosis of
+homosexuality;<a name='2_FNanchor_196'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_196'><sup>[196]</sup></a> this was an exaggerated view which failed to take into
+account the various influences which may deflect dreams. Hirschfeld has
+made the most extensive investigation on this point, and found that among
+100 inverts 87 had exclusively homosexual dreams, while most of the rest
+had no dreams at all.<a name='2_FNanchor_197'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_197'><sup>[197]</sup></a> Among my cases, only 4 definitely state that
+there are no erotic dreams, while 31 acknowledge that the dreams are
+concerned more or less with persons of the same sex. Of these, at least 16
+assert or imply that their dreams are exclusively of the same sex. Two,
+though apparently inverted congenitally, have had erotic dreams of women,
+in one case more frequently than of men; these two exceptions have no
+apparent explanation. Another appears to have sexual dreams of a nightmare
+character in which women appear. In another case there were always at
+first dreams of women, but this subject had sometimes had connection with
+prostitutes, and is not absolutely indifferent to women, while another,
+whose dreams remain heterosexual, had in early life some attraction to
+girls. In the cases of distinct bisexuality there is no unanimity; 2 dream
+of their own sex, 2 dream of both sexes, 1 usually dreams of the opposite
+sex, and 1 man, while dreaming of both, dislikes those dreams in which
+women figure. In at least 3 cases dreams of a sexual character began at
+the age of 8 or earlier.</p>
+
+<div class='blkquot'><p>The phenomena presented by erotic dreams, alike in normal and
+ abnormal persons, are somewhat complex, and dreams are by no
+ means a sure guide to the dreamer's real sexual attitude. The
+ fluctuations of <a name='2_Page_281'></a>dream imagery may be illustrated by the
+ experiences of one of my subjects who thus indirectly summarises
+ his own experiences: &quot;When he was quite a child, he used to be
+ haunted by gross and grotesque dreams of naked adult men, which
+ must have been erotic. At the age of puberty he dreamed in two
+ ways, but always about males. One species of vision was highly
+ idealistic; a radiant and lovely young man's face with floating
+ hair appeared to him on a background of dim shadows. The other
+ was obscene, being generally the sight of a groom's or carter's
+ genitals in a state of violent erection. He never dreamed
+ erotically or sentimentally about women; but when the dream was
+ frightful, the terror-making personage was invariably female. In
+ ordinary dreams, women of his family or acquaintance played a
+ trivial part. At the age of 24, having determined to conquer his
+ homosexual passions, he married, found no difficulty in
+ cohabiting with his wife, and begat several children, although he
+ took but little passionate delight in the sexual act. He still
+ continued to dream exclusively of men, for several years; and the
+ obscene visions became more frequent than the idealistic.
+ Gradually, coarse and uninteresting erotic dreams of women began
+ to haunt his mind in sleep. A curious particular regarding the
+ new type of vision was that he never dreamed of whole females,
+ only of their sexual parts, seen in a blur; and the seminal
+ emissions which attended the mental pictures left a feeling of
+ fatigue and disgust. In course of time, his wife and he agreed to
+ live separately so far as sexual relations are concerned. He then
+ indulged his passion for males, and wholly lost those rudimentary
+ female dreams which had been developed during the period of
+ nuptial cohabitation.&quot;</p>
+
+<p> Not only is it possible for the genuine invert to be trained into
+ heterosexual erotic dreams, but homosexual dreams may
+ occasionally be experienced by persons who are, and always have
+ been, exclusively heterosexual. I could bring forward much
+ evidence on this point. (<i>Cf.</i> &quot;Auto-erotism&quot; in vol. i of these
+ <i>Studies</i>.) Both men and women who have always been of pronounced
+ heterosexual tendency, without a trace of inversion, are liable
+ to rare homosexual dreams, not necessarily involving orgasm or
+ even definite sexual excitement, and sometimes accompanied by a
+ feeling of repugnance. As an example I may present a dream (which
+ had no known origin) of an exclusively heterosexual lady aged 42;
+ she dreamed she was in bed with another woman, unknown to her,
+ and lying on her own stomach, while with her right hand stretched
+ out she was feeling the other's sexual parts. She could
+ distinctly perceive the clitoris, vagina, etc.; she felt a sort
+ of disgust with herself for what she was doing, but continued
+ until she awoke; she then found herself lying on her stomach as
+ in the dream and at first thought she must have been touching
+ herself, but realized that this could not have been the <a name='2_Page_282'></a>case.
+ (Niceforo, who believes that inversion may develop out of
+ masturbation, considers that dreams of masturbation by
+ association of ideas may take on an inverted character [<i>Le
+ Psicopatie Sessuale</i>, 1897, pp. 35, 69]; this, however, must be
+ rare, and will not account for most of the dreams in question.)</p>
+
+<p> N&auml;cke and Colin Scott, some years ago, independently referred to
+ cases in which normal persons were liable to homosexual dreams,
+ and F&eacute;r&eacute; (<i>Revue de M&eacute;decine</i>, Dec., 1898) referred to a man who
+ had a horror of women, but appeared only to manifest
+ homosexuality in his dreams. N&auml;cke (<i>Archiv f&uuml;r
+ Kriminal-Anthropologie</i>, 1907, Heft I, 2) calls dreams which
+ represent a reaction of opposition to the dreamer's ordinary life
+ &quot;contrast dreams.&quot; Hirschfeld, who accepts N&auml;cke's &quot;contrast
+ dreams&quot; in relation to homosexuality, considers that they
+ indicate a latent bisexuality. We may admit this is so, in the
+ same sense in which a complementary color image called up by
+ another color indicates the possibility of perceiving that color.
+ In most cases, however, it seems to me that homosexual dreams in
+ normal persons may be simply explained as due to the ordinary
+ confusion and transition of dream imagery. (See Ellis, <i>The World
+ of Dreams</i>, especially ch. ii.) </p></div>
+
+<p><i>Methods of Sexual Relationship</i>.&mdash;The exact mode in which an inverted
+instinct finds satisfaction is frequently of importance from the
+medico-legal standpoint;<a name='2_FNanchor_198'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_198'><sup>[198]</sup></a> from a psychological standpoint it is of
+minor significance, being chiefly of interest as showing the degree to
+which the individual has departed from the instinctive feelings of his
+normal fellow-beings.</p>
+
+<p>Taking 57 inverted men of whom I have definite knowledge, I find that 12,
+restrained by moral or other considerations, have never had any physical
+relationship with their own sex. In some 22 cases the sexual relationship
+rarely goes beyond close physical contact and fondling, or at most mutual
+masturbation and intercrural intercourse. In 10 or 11 cases <i>fellatio</i>
+(oral excitation)&mdash;frequently in addition to some form of mutual
+masturbation, and usually, though not always, as the active agency&mdash;is the
+form preferred. In 14 cases, actual <i>pedicatio</i><a name='2_FNanchor_199'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_199'><sup>[199]</sup></a>&mdash;usually <a name='2_Page_283'></a>active, not
+passive&mdash;has been exercised. In these cases, however, <i>pedicatio</i> is by no
+means always the habitual or even the preferred method of gratification.
+It seems to be the preferred method in about 7 cases. Several who have
+never experienced it, including some who have never practised any form of
+physical relationship, state that they feel no objection to <i>pedicatio</i>;
+some have this feeling in regard to active, others in regard to passive,
+<i>pedicatio</i>. The proportion of inverts who practise or have at some time
+experienced <i>pedicatio</i> thus revealed (nearly 25 per cent.) is large; in
+Germany Hirschfeld finds it to be only 8 per cent., and Merzbach only 6. I
+believe, however, that a wider induction from a larger number of English
+and American cases would yield a proportion much nearer to that found in
+Germany.<a name='2_FNanchor_200'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_200'><sup>[200]</sup></a></p>
+
+
+<p><b>PSEUDOSEXUAL ATTRACTION.&mdash;</b>It is sometimes supposed that in homosexual
+relationships one person is always active, physically and emotionally, the
+other passive. Between men, at all events, this is very frequently not the
+case, and the invert cannot tell if he feels like a man or like a woman.
+Thus, one writes:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class='blkquot'><p>&quot;In bed with my friend I feel as he feels, and he feels as I
+ feel. The result is masturbation, and nothing more or desire for
+ more on my part. I get it over, too, as soon as possible, in
+ order to come to the best&mdash;sleeping arms round each other, or
+ talking so.&quot; </p></div>
+
+<p>It remains true, however, that there may usually be traced what it is
+possible to call pseudosexual attraction, by which I mean a tendency for
+the invert to be attracted toward persons <a name='2_Page_284'></a>unlike himself, so that in his
+sexual relationships there is a certain semblance of sexual opposition.
+Numa Praetorius considers that in homosexuality the attraction of
+opposites&mdash;the attraction for soldiers and other primitive vigorous
+types&mdash;plays a greater part than among normal lovers.<a name='2_FNanchor_201'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_201'><sup>[201]</sup></a> This
+pseudosexual attraction is, however, as Hirschfeld points out,<a name='2_FNanchor_202'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_202'><sup>[202]</sup></a> and as
+we see by the Histories here presented, by no means invariable.</p>
+
+<div class='blkquot'><p>M. N. writes: &quot;To me it appears that the female element must, of
+ necessity, exist in the body that desires the male, and that
+ nature keeps her law in the spirit, though she breaks it in the
+ form. The rest is all a matter of individual temperament and
+ environment. The female nature of the invert, hampered though it
+ is by its disguise of flesh, is still able to exert an
+ extraordinary influence, and calls insistently upon the male.
+ This influence seems called into action most violently in the
+ presence of males possessed of strong sexual magnetism of their
+ own. Such men are generally more or less conscious of the
+ influence, and the result is either a vague appreciation, which
+ will make the male wonder why he gets on so well with the invert,
+ or else the influence will be realized to be something
+ incongruous and unnatural, and will be resented accordingly.
+ Sometimes, indeed, the reciprocated feeling (circumstance and
+ opportunity permitting) will prove strong enough to induce sexual
+ relations. Reason will then generally overpower instinct, and the
+ feeling, aroused unaware, will probably be changed into
+ repulsion. Further, the influence reacts in the same way on
+ women, who, particularly if they are strongly sexual, experience
+ involuntary sensations of dislike or antagonism on association
+ with inverts. There is, however, one terrible reality for the
+ invert to face, no matter how much he may wish to avoid it and
+ seek to deceive himself. There exists for him an almost absolute
+ lack of any genuine satisfaction either in the way of the
+ affections or desires. His whole life is passed in vainly seeking
+ and desiring the male, the antithesis of his nature, and in
+ consorting with inverts he must perforce be content with the male
+ in form only, the shadow without the substance. Indeed, one
+ invert necessarily regards another as being of the same undesired
+ female sex as himself, and for this reason it will be found that,
+ while friendships between inverts frequently exist (and these are
+ characteristically feminine, unstable, and liable to betrayal),
+ love-attachments are less common, and when they occur must
+ naturally be based upon considerable self-deception. Venal
+ gratifications are always, of course, as possible as they are
+ unsatisfactory, and here perhaps some of the <a name='2_Page_285'></a>peculiarities of
+ taste accompanying inversion may admit of elucidation. In
+ considering the peculiar predilection shown by inverts for youths
+ of inferior social position, for the wearers of uniforms, and for
+ extreme physical development and virility not necessarily
+ accompanied by intellectuality, regard must be had to the
+ probable conduct of women placed in a position of complete
+ irresponsibility combined with absolute freedom of action and
+ every opportunity for promiscuity. It seems to me that the
+ importance of recognizing the underlying female element in
+ inversion cannot be too strongly insisted upon.&quot;</p>
+
+<p> &quot;The majority&quot; [of inverts], writes &quot;Z,&quot; &quot;differ in no detail of
+ their outward appearance, their <i>physique</i>, or their dress from
+ normal men. They are athletic, masculine in habit, frank in
+ manner, passing through society year after year without arousing
+ a suspicion of their inner temperament; were it not so, society
+ would long ago have had its eyes opened to the amount of
+ perverted sexuality it harbors.&quot; These lines were written, not in
+ opposition to the more subtle distinctions pointed out above, but
+ in refutation of the vulgar error which confuses the typical
+ invert with the painted and petticoated creatures who appear in
+ police-courts from time to time, and whose portraits are
+ presented by Lombroso, Legludic, etc. On another occasion the
+ same writer remarked, while expressing general agreement with the
+ idea of a pseudosexual attraction: &quot;The <i>liaison</i> is by no means
+ always sought and begun by the person who is abnormally
+ constituted. I mean that I can cite cases of decided males who
+ have made up to inverts, and have found their happiness in the
+ reciprocated passion. One pronounced male of this sort, again,
+ once said to me, 'men are so much more affectionate than women.'
+ [Precisely the same words were used by one of my subjects.] Also,
+ the <i>liaison</i> springs up now and then quite accidentally through
+ juxtaposition, when it is difficult to say whether either at the
+ outset had an inverted tendency of any marked quality. In these
+ cases the sexual relation seems to come on as a heightening of
+ comradely affection, and is found to be pleasurable&mdash;sometimes, I
+ think, discovered to be safe as well as satisfying. On the other
+ hand, so far as I know, it is extremely rare to observe a
+ permanent <i>liaison</i> between two pronounced inverts.&quot;</p>
+
+<p> The tendency to pseudosexual attraction in the homosexual would
+ thus seem to involve a preference for normal persons. How far
+ this is the case it seems difficult to state positively. Usually,
+ one may say, an invert falls in love (exactly as in the case of a
+ normal person) without any intellectual calculation as to the
+ temperamental ability to return the affection which the object of
+ his love may possess. Naturally, however, there cannot be any
+ adequate return of the affection in the absence of an actual or
+ latent homosexual disposition. On this point an American
+ correspondent (H. C.), with a wide knowledge of inversion in many
+ <a name='2_Page_286'></a>lands, writes: &quot;One of your correspondents declares that inverts
+ long for sexual relations with normal men rather than with one
+ another. If this be true, I have never once found it exemplified
+ in all my wide experience of inverts; and I have submitted his
+ assertion to more than 50. These have replied invariably that
+ unless a man is himself homosexual, nearly all the pleasure of
+ <i>fellatio</i> is absent. The fact is, the majority of inverts flock
+ together not from exigency, but from choice. The mere sexual act
+ is, if anything, far less the sole object between inverts than it
+ is between normal men and women. Why should the invert sigh for
+ intercourse with normal men, where mutual confidences and
+ sympathies and love would be out of the question? Personally, I
+ decline to commit <i>fellatio</i> with a man who is given to women;
+ the thought of it is repugnant to me. And this is the attitude
+ with every invert I have questioned. The nearest approach to
+ confirmation of your correspondent's theory has been when an
+ extremely feminine invert here and there has admitted the wish
+ that a certain normal man <i>were</i> inverted. Indeed, the
+ temperamental gamut of inversion is itself broad enough to
+ embrace the most widely divergent ideals. As my furthest-reaching
+ demands attain fruition in the gentle and pretty boy, so his own
+ robuster affinity resides in me. If inverts were actually women,
+ then indeed the normal male would be their ideal. But inverts are
+ not women. Inverts are males capable of passionate friendship,
+ and their ideal is the male who will give them passionate
+ friendship in return.&quot; </p></div>
+
+<p>In at least 24, probably many more, of my male cases there is a marked
+contrast, and in a still larger number a less-marked contrast, between the
+subject and the individuals he is attracted to; either he is of somewhat
+feminine and sensitive nature, and admires more simple and virile natures,
+or he is fairly vigorous and admires boys who are often of lower social
+class. Inverted women also are attracted to more clinging feminine
+persons.<a name='2_FNanchor_203'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_203'><sup>[203]</sup></a> A sexual attraction for boys is, no doubt, as Moll points
+out, that form of inversion which comes nearest to normal sexuality, for
+the subject of it usually approaches nearer to the average man in physical
+and mental disposition. The reason of this is obvious: boys resemble
+women, and therefore it requires a less profound organic twist to become
+sexually attracted to them. Anyone who has watched private theatricals in
+boys'<a name='2_Page_287'></a> schools will have observed how easy it is for boys to personate
+women successfully, and it is well known that until the middle of the
+seventeenth century women's parts on the stage were always taken by boys,
+whether or not with injury to their own or other people's morals.<a name='2_FNanchor_204'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_204'><sup>[204]</sup></a> It
+is also worthy of note that in Greece, where homosexuality flourished so
+extensively, and apparently with so little accompaniment of neurotic
+degeneration, it was often held that only boys under 18 should be loved;
+so that the love of boys merged into love of women. About 18 of my cases
+are most strongly attracted to youths,&mdash;preferably of about the age of 18
+to 20,&mdash;and they are, for the most part, among the more normal and healthy
+of the cases. A preference for older men, or else a considerable degree of
+indifference to age alone, is more common, and perhaps indicates a deeper
+degree of perversion.</p>
+
+<p>Putting aside the age of the object desired, it must be said that there is
+a distinctly general, though not universal, tendency for sexual inverts to
+approach the feminine type, either in psychic disposition or physical
+constitution, or both.<a name='2_FNanchor_205'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_205'><sup>[205]</sup></a> I cannot say how far this is explained by the
+irritable nervous system and delicate health which are so often associated
+with inversion, though this is certainly an important factor. Although the
+invert himself may stoutly affirm his masculinity, and although this
+femininity may not be very obvious, its wide prevalence may be <a name='2_Page_288'></a>asserted
+with considerable assurance, and by no means only among the small minority
+of inverts who take an exclusively passive r&ocirc;le, though in these it is
+usually most marked. In this I am confirmed by Q., who writes: &quot;In all, or
+certainly almost all, the cases of congenital male inverts (excluding
+psycho-sexual hermaphrodites) that I know there has been a remarkable
+sensitiveness and delicacy of sentiment, sympathy, and an intuitive habit
+of mind, such as we generally associate with the feminine sex, even though
+the body might be quite masculine in its form and habit.&quot;<a name='2_FNanchor_206'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_206'><sup>[206]</sup></a> When,
+however, a distinguished invert said to Moll: &quot;We are all women; that we
+do not deny,&quot; he put the matter in too extreme a form. The feminine traits
+of the homosexual are not usually of a conspicuous character. &quot;I believe
+that inverts of plainly feminine nature are rare exceptions,&quot; wrote
+N&auml;cke:<a name='2_FNanchor_207'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_207'><sup>[207]</sup></a> and that statement may be accepted even by those who emphasize
+the prevalence of feminine traits among inverts.</p>
+
+<p>In inverted women some degree of masculinity or boyishness is equally
+prevalent, and it is not usually found in the women to whom they are
+attracted. Even in inversion the need for a certain sexual opposition&mdash;the
+longing for something which the lover himself does not possess&mdash;still
+prevails. It expresses itself sometimes in an attraction between persons
+of different race and color. I am told that in American prisons for women
+Lesbian relationships are specially frequent between white and black
+women.<a name='2_FNanchor_208'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_208'><sup>[208]</sup></a> A similar affinity is found among the<a name='2_Page_289'></a> Arabs, says Kocher; and
+if an Arab woman has a Lesbian friend the latter is usually European. In
+Cochin China, too, according to Lorion, while the Chinese are chiefly
+active pederasts, the Annamites are chiefly passive.</p>
+
+<p>It must, however, be remembered that, in normal love, homogamy, the
+attraction of the like, prevails over heterogamy, the attraction of the
+unlike, which is chiefly confined to those features which belong to the
+sphere of the secondary sexual characters;<a name='2_FNanchor_209'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_209'><sup>[209]</sup></a> the same appears to be
+true in inversion, and the homosexual are probably, on the whole, more
+attracted by the traits which they seem to themselves to possess than by
+those which are foreign to themselves.<a name='2_FNanchor_210'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_210'><sup>[210]</sup></a></p>
+
+
+<p><b>PHYSICAL ABNORMALITIES.&mdash;</b>The circumstances under which many of my cases
+were investigated often made information under this head difficult to
+obtain, or to verify. In at least 4 cases the penis is very large, while
+in at least 3 it is small and undeveloped, with small and flabby testes.
+It seems probable that variations in these two directions are both common,
+but it is doubtful whether they possess as much significance as the
+tendency to infantilism of the sexual organs in inverted women seems to
+possess. Hirschfeld considers that the genital organs of inverts resemble
+those of normal people. He finds, however, that phimosis is rather
+common.<a name='2_FNanchor_211'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_211'><sup>[211]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>More significant, perhaps, than specifically genital peculiarities are the
+deviations found in the general conformation <a name='2_Page_290'></a>of the body.<a name='2_FNanchor_212'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_212'><sup>[212]</sup></a> In at
+least 2 cases there are well-developed breasts, in 1 the breasts swelling
+and becoming red.<a name='2_FNanchor_213'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_213'><sup>[213]</sup></a> In 1 case there are &quot;menstrual&quot; phenomena, physical
+and psychic, recurring every four weeks. In several cases the hips are
+broad and the arms rounded, while some are skillful in throwing a ball.
+One was born with a double squint. At least 2 were 7 months' children. In
+the previous chapter I have referred to the tendency to hypertrichosis and
+occasionally oligotrichosis among inverted women; among the men it is the
+latter condition which seems more common, and in several cases the bodies
+are hairless, or with but scanty hair. A few are left-handed, though not
+perhaps an abnormal proportion.<a name='2_FNanchor_214'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_214'><sup>[214]</sup></a> The sexual characters of the
+handwriting are in some cases clearly inverted, the men writing a feminine
+hand and the women a masculine hand.<a name='2_FNanchor_215'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_215'><sup>[215]</sup></a> A high feminine voice is
+sometimes found.<a name='2_FNanchor_216'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_216'><sup>[216]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>A marked characteristic of many inverts, though one not easy of precise
+definition, is their youthfulness of appearance, and frequently child-like
+faces, equally in both sexes. This has <a name='2_Page_291'></a>often been remarked,<a name='2_FNanchor_217'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_217'><sup>[217]</sup></a> and is
+pronounced among many of my subjects.</p>
+
+<p>The frequent inability of male inverts to whistle was first pointed out by
+Ulrichs, and Hirschfeld has found it in 23 per cent. Many of my cases
+confess to this inability, while some of the women inverts can whistle
+admirably. Although this inability of male inverts is only found among a
+minority, I am quite satisfied that it is well marked among a considerable
+minority. One of my correspondents, M. N., writes to me: &quot;With regard to
+the general inability of inverts to whistle (I am not able to do so
+myself), their fondness for green (my favorite color), their feminine
+caligraphy, skill at female occupations, etc., these all seem to me but
+indications of the one principle. To go still farther and include trivial
+things, few inverts even smoke in the same manner and with the same
+enjoyment as a man; they have seldom the male facility at games, cannot
+throw at a mark with precision, or even spit!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Nearly all these peculiarities indicate a minor degree of nervous
+disturbance and lead to modification, as my correspondent points out, in a
+feminine direction. It is scarcely necessary to add that they by no means
+necessarily imply inversion. Shelley, for instance, was unable to whistle,
+though he never gave an indication of inversion; but he was a person of
+somewhat abnormal and feminine organization, and he illustrates the
+tendency of these apparently very insignificant functional anomalies to be
+correlated with other and more important psychic anomalies.</p>
+
+<p>The greater part of these various anatomical peculiarities and functional
+anomalies point, more or less clearly, to the prevalence among inverts of
+a tendency to infantilism, combined with feminism in men and masculinism
+in women.<a name='2_FNanchor_218'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_218'><sup>[218]</sup></a> This tendency is <a name='2_Page_292'></a>denied by Hirschfeld, but it is often
+well indicated among the subjects whose histories I have been able to
+present, and is indeed suggested by Hirschfeld's own elaborate results; so
+that it can scarcely be passed over. I regard it as highly significant,
+and it is in harmony with all that we are learning to know regarding the
+important part played by the internal secretions, alike in inversion and
+the general bodily modifications in an infantile, feminine, and masculine
+direction.</p>
+
+<p>If we are justified in believing that there is a tendency for inverted
+persons to be somewhat arrested in development, approaching the child
+type, we may connect this fact with the sexual precocity sometimes marked
+in inverts, for precocity is commonly accompanied by rapid arrest of
+development.</p>
+
+<div class='blkquot'><p>A correspondent, who is himself inverted, furnishes the following
+ notes of cases he is well acquainted with; I quote them here, as
+ they illustrate the anomalies commonly found:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p> 1. A., male, eldest child of typically neurotic family. Three
+ children in all: 2 male and 1 female. The other 2 are somewhat
+ eccentric, unsocial, and sexually frigid, 1 in a marked degree.
+ The curious point about this case is that A., the only one of the
+ family possessed of mental ability and social qualifications,
+ should be inverted. Parents' marriage was very ill-assorted and
+ inharmonious, the father being of great stature and the mother
+ abnormally small and of highly nervous temperament, both of
+ feeble health. Ancestry unfortunate, especially on mother's side.</p>
+
+<p> 2. B., male, invert, younger of 2 sons, no other children, has
+ extremely feminine disposition and appearance, of considerable
+ personal attraction, and has great musical talent. Penis very
+ small and marked breast-development.</p>
+
+<p> 3. C., male, invert, younger of 2 sons, no other children.
+ Interval of six years between first and second son. Parents'
+ marriage one of great affection, but degenerate ancestry on
+ mother's side. Cancer and scrofula in family.</p>
+
+<p> 4. D., male, invert, second child of 6; remainder girls. Of
+ humble social position. Considerable depravity evinced by all the
+ members of this family, with the exception of D., who alone
+ proved steady, honest, and industrious.</p>
+
+<p> 5. E., male, invert, second son of family of 3, the youngest
+ child being a girl, stillborn. Of extreme neurotic temperament
+ fostered by upbringing. Effeminate in build and disposition;
+ musically gifted.</p><a name='2_Page_293'></a>
+
+<p> 6. F., male, invert, second child of family of 5. Eldest child a
+ girl, died in youth. After F. a boy G., a girl H., and another
+ girl stillborn. Parents badly matched; mother of considerable
+ mental and physical strength; father last representative of
+ moribund stock, the result of intermarriage. Children all
+ resembling father in appearance and mother in disposition.
+ Drink-tendency in both boys, to which F.'s death at the age of 30
+ was mainly due. G. committed suicide some years later. The girl
+ H. married into a family with worse ancestry than her own. Has
+ two children:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p> 7. I. and J., boy and girl, both inverted as far as I am able to
+ judge. The boy was born with some deformity of the feet and
+ ankles; is of effeminate tastes and appearance. Boy resembles
+ mother, and girl, who is of great physical development, resembles
+ father.</p>
+
+<p> The same correspondent adds:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I have noticed little abnormal with regard to the genital
+ formation of inverts. There are, however, frequent abnormalities
+ of proportion in their figures, the hands and feet being
+ noticeably smaller and more shapely, the waist more marked, the
+ body softer and less muscular. Almost invariably there is either
+ cranial malformation or the head approaches the feminine in type
+ and shape.&quot; </p></div>
+
+<p><b>ARTISTIC AND OTHER APTITUDES.&mdash;</b>All avocations are represented among
+inverts. Among the subjects here dealt with are found, at one end of the
+scale, numerous manual workers, and at the other end an equal number,
+sometimes of aristocratic family, who exercise no profession at all. There
+are 12 physicians, 9 men of letters, at least 7 are engaged in commercial
+life, 6 are artists, architects, or composers, 4 are or have been actors.
+These figures cannot give any clue to the relative extent of inversion in
+various occupations, but they indicate that no class of occupation
+furnishes a safeguard against inversion.</p>
+
+<p>There are, however, certain avocations to which inverts seem especially
+called.<a name='2_FNanchor_219'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_219'><sup>[219]</sup></a> One of the chief of these is literature. The apparent
+predominance of physicians is easily explicable. The frequency with which
+literature is represented is probably more genuine. Here, indeed, inverts
+seem to find the highest degree of success and reputation. At least half a
+dozen of my <a name='2_Page_294'></a>subjects are successful men of letters, and I could easily
+add others by going outside the group of Histories included in this study.
+They especially cultivate those regions of <i>belles-lettres</i> which lie on
+the borderland between prose and verse. Though they do not usually attain
+much eminence in poetry, they are often very accomplished writers of
+verse. They may be attracted to history, but rarely attempt tasks of great
+magnitude, involving much patient labor, though to this rule there are
+exceptions. Pure science seems to have relatively little attraction for
+the homosexual.<a name='2_FNanchor_220'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_220'><sup>[220]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>An examination of my Histories reveals the interesting fact that 45 of the
+subjects, or in the proportion of 56 per cent., possess artistic aptitudes
+of varying degree. Galton found, from the investigation of nearly 1000
+persons, that the average showing artistic tastes in England was only
+about 30 per cent. It must also be said that my figures are probably below
+the truth, as no special point was made of investigating the matter, and
+also that in some cases the artistic ability is of high order.</p>
+
+<div class='blkquot'><p>It is suggested that Adler's theory of
+ <i>Minderwertigkeit</i>&mdash;according to which we react strenuously
+ against our congenital organic defects and fortify them into
+ virtues&mdash;may be applied to the invert's acquirement of artistic
+ abilities (G. Rosenstein, &quot;Die Theorien der Organminderwertigkeit
+ und die Bisexualit&auml;t,&quot; <i>Jahrbuch f&uuml;r Psychoanalytische
+ Forschungen</i>, vol. ii, 1910, p. 398). This theory is in some
+ cases of valuable <a name='2_Page_295'></a>application, but it seems doubtful to me
+ whether it is very profitable in the present connection. The
+ artistic aptitudes of inverts may better be regarded as part of
+ their organic tendencies than as a reaction against those
+ tendencies. In this connection I may quote the remarks of an
+ American correspondent, himself homosexual: &quot;Regarding the
+ connection between inversion and artistic capacity, so far as I
+ can see, the temperament of every invert seems to strive to find
+ artistic expression&mdash;crudely or otherwise. Inverts, as a rule,
+ seek the paths of life that lie in pleasant places; their
+ resistance to opposing obstacles is elastic, their work is never
+ strenuous (if they can help it), and their accomplishments hardly
+ ever of practical use. This is all true of the born artist, as
+ well. Both inverts and artists are inordinately fond of praise;
+ both yearn for a life where admiration is the reward for little
+ energy. In a word, they seem to be 'born tired,' begotten by
+ parents who were tired, too.&quot;</p>
+
+<p> Hirschfeld (<i>Die Homosexualit&auml;t</i>, p. 66) gives a list of pictures
+ and sculptures which specially appeal to the homosexual.
+ Prominent among them are representations of St. Sebastian,
+ Gainsborough's Blue Boy, Vandyck's youthful men, the Hermes of
+ Praxiteles, Michelangelo's Slave, Rodin's and Meunier's
+ working-men types.</p>
+
+<p> As regards music, my cases reveal the aptitude which has been
+ remarked by others as peculiarly common among inverts. It has
+ been extravagantly said that all musicians are inverts; it is
+ certain that various famous musicians, among the dead and the
+ living, have been homosexual. Ingegnieros speaks of a
+ &quot;genito-musical syn&aelig;sthesia,&quot; analogous to color-hearing, in this
+ connection. Calesia states (<i>Archivio di Psichiatria</i>, 1900, p.
+ 209) that 60 per cent, inverts are musicians. Hirschfeld (<i>Die
+ Homosexualit&auml;t</i>, p. 500) regards this estimate as excessive, but
+ he himself elsewhere states (p. 175) that 98 per cent, of male
+ inverts are greatly attracted to music, the women being decidedly
+ less attracted. Oppenheim (in a paper summarized in the
+ <i>Neurologische Centralblatt</i> for June 1, 1910, and the <i>Alienist
+ and Neurologist</i> for Nov., 1910) well remarks that the musical
+ disposition is marked by a great emotional instability, and this
+ instability is a disposition to nervousness. It is thus that
+ neurasthenia is so common among musicians. The musician has not
+ been rendered nervous by the music, but he owes his nervousness
+ (as also, it may be added, his disposition to homosexuality) to
+ the same disposition to which he owes his musical aptitude.
+ Moreover, the musician is frequently one-sided in his gifts, and
+ the possession of a single hypertrophied aptitude is itself
+ closely related to the neuropathic and psychopathic diathesis. </p></div>
+
+<p>The tendency to dramatic aptitude&mdash;found among a large proportion of my
+subjects who have never been professional <a name='2_Page_296'></a>actors&mdash;has attracted the
+attention of previous investigators in this field.<a name='2_FNanchor_221'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_221'><sup>[221]</sup></a> Thus, Moll refers
+to the frequency of artistic, and especially dramatic, talent among
+inverts, and remarks that the cause is doubtful. After pointing out that
+the lie which they have to be perpetually living renders inverts always
+actors, he goes on to say:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class='blkquot'><p>Apart from this, it seems to me that the capacity and the
+ inclination to conceive situations and to represent them in a
+ masterly manner corresponds to an abnormal predisposition of the
+ nervous system, just as does sexual inversion; so that both
+ phenomena are due to the same source. </p></div>
+
+<p>I am in agreement with this statement; the congenitally inverted may, I
+believe, be looked upon as a class of individuals exhibiting nervous
+characters which, to some extent, approximate them to persons of artistic
+genius. The dramatic and artistic aptitudes of inverts are, therefore,
+partly due to the circumstances of the invert's life, which render him
+necessarily an actor,&mdash;and in some few cases lead him into a love of
+deception comparable with that of a hysterical woman,&mdash;and partly, it is
+probable, to a congenital nervous predisposition allied to the
+predisposition to dramatic aptitude.</p>
+
+<div class='blkquot'><p>One of my correspondents has long been interested in the
+ frequency of inversion among actors and actresses. He knew an
+ inverted actor who told him he adopted the profession because it
+ would enable him to indulge his proclivity; but, on the whole, he
+ regards this tendency as due to &quot;hitherto unconsidered
+ imaginative flexibilities and curiosities in the individual. The
+ actor, <i>ex hypothesi</i>, is one who works himself by sympathy
+ (intellectual and emotional) into states of psychological being
+ that are not his own. He learns to comprehend&mdash;nay, to live
+ himself <a name='2_Page_297'></a>into&mdash;relations which were originally alien to his
+ nature. The capacity for doing this&mdash;what makes a born
+ actor&mdash;implies a faculty for extending his artistically acquired
+ experience into life. In the process of his trade, therefore, he
+ becomes at all points sensitive to human emotions, and, sexuality
+ being the most intellectually undetermined of the appetites after
+ hunger, the actor might discover in himself a sort of sexual
+ indifference, out of which a sexual aberration could easily
+ arise. A man devoid of this imaginative flexibility could not be
+ a successful actor. The man who possesses it would be exposed to
+ divagations of the sexual instinct under esthetical or merely
+ wanton influences. Something of the same kind is applicable to
+ musicians and artists, in whom sexual inversion prevails beyond
+ the average. They are conditioned by their esthetical faculty,
+ and encouraged by the circumstances of their life to feel and
+ express the whole gamut of emotional experience. Thus they get an
+ environment which (unless they are sharply otherwise
+ differentiated) leads easily to experiments in passion. All this
+ joins on to what you call the 'variational diathesis' of men of
+ genius. But I should seek the explanation of the phenomenon less
+ in the original sexual constitution than in the exercise of
+ sympathetic, assimilative emotional qualities, powerfully
+ stimulated and acted on by the conditions of the individual's
+ life. The artist, the singer, the actor, the painter, are more
+ exposed to the influences out of which sexual differentiation in
+ an abnormal direction may arise. Some persons are certainly made
+ abnormal by nature, others, of this sympathetic artistic
+ temperament, may become so through their sympathies plus their
+ conditions of life.&quot; It is possible there may be some element of
+ truth in this view, which my correspondent regarded as purely
+ hypothetical. </p></div>
+
+<p>In this connection I may, perhaps, mention a moral quality which is very
+often associated with dramatic aptitude, and also with minor degrees of
+nervous degeneration, and that is vanity and the love of applause. While
+among a considerable section of inverts it is not more marked than among
+the non-inverted, if not, indeed, less marked, among another section it is
+found in an exaggerated degree. In at least one of my cases vanity and
+delight in admiration, both as regards personal qualities and artistic
+productions, reach an almost morbid extent. And the quotations from
+letters written by various others of my subjects show a curious
+complacency in the description of their personal physical characters,
+markedly absent in other cases. It is suggested by Alexander Schmid, on
+the basis of Adler's views, that <a name='2_Page_298'></a>this vanity, which sometimes in the
+inverted artist becomes an exalted pride, as of a guardian of sacred
+mysteries, may be regarded as an effort to secure a compensation for the
+consciousness of feminine defect.<a name='2_FNanchor_222'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_222'><sup>[222]</sup></a></p>
+
+<div class='blkquot'><p>The extreme type of this preoccupation with personal beauty is
+ represented by the history of himself sent by a young Italian of
+ good family to Zola in the hope&mdash;itself a sign of vanity&mdash;that
+ the distinguished novelist would make it the subject of one of
+ his works. The history is reproduced in the <i>Archives
+ d'Anthropologie Criminelle</i> (1894) and in <i>L'Homosexualit&eacute; et les
+ Types Homosexuels</i> (1910) by &quot;Dr. Laupts&quot; (G. Saint-Paul). I
+ quote the following passage: &quot;At the age of 18 I was, with few
+ differences, what I am now (at 23). I am rather below the medium
+ height (1.65 metres), well proportioned, slender, but not lean.
+ My torso is superb; a sculptor could find nothing against it, and
+ would not find it very different from that of Antinotis. My back
+ is very arched, perhaps too much so; and my hips are very
+ developed; my pelvis is broad, like a woman's; my knees slightly
+ approximate; my feet are small; my hands superb; the fingers
+ curved back and with glistening nails, rosy and polished, cut
+ squarely like those of ancient statues. My neck is long and
+ round, the nape charmingly adorned with downy hairs. My head is
+ charming, and at 18 was more so. The oval of it is perfect and
+ strikes all by its infantine form. At 23 I am to be taken for 17
+ at most. My complexion is white and rosy, deepening at the
+ faintest emotion. The forehead is not beautiful; it recedes
+ slightly and is hollow at the temples, but, fortunately, it is
+ half-covered by long hair, of a dark blonde, which curls
+ naturally. The head is perfect in form, because of the curly
+ hair, but on examination there is an enormous protuberance at the
+ occiput. My eyes are oval, of a gray blue, with dark chestnut
+ eyelashes and thick, arched eyebrows. My eyes are very liquid,
+ but with dark circles, and bistered; and they are subject to
+ slight temporary inflammation. My mouth is fairly large, with
+ thick red lips, the lower pendent; they tell me I have the
+ Austrian mouth. My teeth are dazzling, though three are decayed
+ and stopped; fortunately, they cannot be seen. My ears are small
+ and with very colored lobes. My chin is very fat, and at 18 it
+ was smooth and velvety as a woman's; at present there is a slight
+ beard, always shaved. Two beauty spots, black and velvety, on my
+ left cheek, contrast with my blue eyes. My nose is thin and
+ straight, with delicate nostrils and a slight, almost insensible
+ curve. My voice is gentle, and people always regret that I have
+ not learned to sing.&quot; This description is noteworthy as a
+ detailed portrait <a name='2_Page_299'></a>of a sexual invert of a certain type; the
+ whole history is interesting and instructive. </p></div>
+
+<p>Certain peculiarities in taste as regards costume have rightly or wrongly
+been attributed to inverts,&mdash;apart from the tendency of a certain group to
+adopt feminine habits,&mdash;and may here be mentioned. Tardieu many years ago
+referred to the taste for keeping the neck uncovered. This peculiarity may
+occasionally be observed among inverts, especially the more artistic among
+them. The cause does not appear to be precisely vanity so much as that
+physical consciousness which is so curiously marked in inverts, and
+induces the more feminine among them to cultivate feminine grace of form,
+and the more masculine to emphasize the masculine athletic habit.</p>
+
+<p>It has also been remarked that inverts exhibit a preference for green
+garments. In Rome <i>cin&aelig;di</i> were for this reason called <i>galbanati</i>.
+Chevalier remarks that some years ago a band of pederasts at Paris wore
+green cravats as a badge. This decided preference for green is well marked
+in several of my cases of both sexes, and in some at least the preference
+certainly arose spontaneously. Green (as Jastrow and others have shown) is
+very rarely the favorite color of adults of the Anglo-Saxon race, though
+some inquirers have found it to be more commonly a preferred color among
+children, especially girls, and it is more often preferred by women than
+by men.<a name='2_FNanchor_223'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_223'><sup>[223]</sup></a> The favorite color among normal women, and indeed very often
+among normal men, though here not so often as blue, is red, and it is
+notable that of recent years there has been a fashion for a red tie to be
+adopted by inverts as their badge. This is especially marked among the
+&quot;fairies&quot; (as a <i>fellator</i> is there termed) in New York. &quot;It is red,&quot;
+writes an American correspondent, himself inverted, &quot;that has become
+almost a synonym for sexual inversion, not only in the minds of inverts
+themselves, but in the popular mind. To <a name='2_Page_300'></a>wear a red necktie on the street
+is to invite remarks from newsboys and others&mdash;remarks that have the
+practices of inverts for their theme. A friend told me once that when a
+group of street-boys caught sight of the red necktie he was wearing they
+sucked their fingers in imitation of <i>fellatio</i>. Male prostitutes who walk
+the streets of Philadelphia and New York almost invariably wear red
+neckties. It is the badge of all their tribe. The rooms of many of my
+inverted friends have red as the prevailing color in decorations. Among my
+classmates, at the medical school, few ever had the courage to wear a red
+tie; those who did never repeated the experiment.&quot;</p>
+
+
+<p><b>MORAL ATTITUDE OF THE INVERT.&mdash;</b>There is some interest in tracing the
+invert's own attitude toward his anomaly, and his estimate of its
+morality. As my cases are not patients seeking to be cured of their
+perversion, this attitude cannot be taken for granted. I have noted the
+moral attitude in 57 cases. In 8 the subjects loathe themselves, and have
+fought in vain against their perversion, which they often regard as a sin.
+Nine or ten are doubtful, and have little to say in justification of their
+condition, which they regard as perhaps morbid, a &quot;moral disease.&quot; One,
+while thinking it right to gratify his natural instincts, admits that they
+may be vices. The remainder, a large majority (including all the women)
+are, on the other hand, emphatic in their assertion that their moral
+position is precisely the same as that of the normally constituted
+individual, on the lowest ground a matter of taste, and at least two state
+that a homosexual relationship should be regarded as sacramental, a holy
+matrimony; two or three even regard inverted love as nobler than ordinary
+sexual love; several add the proviso that there should be consent and
+understanding on both sides, and no attempt at seduction. The chief regret
+of 2 or 3 is the double life they are obliged to lead.</p>
+
+<p>When inverts have clearly faced and realized their own nature it is not so
+much, it seems, their conscience that worries them, or even the fear of
+the police, as the attitude of the world. An American correspondent
+writes: &quot;It is the fear of public <a name='2_Page_301'></a>opinion that hangs above them like the
+sword of Damocles. This fear is the heritage of all of us. It is not the
+fear of conscience and is not engendered by a feeling of wrongdoing.
+Rather, it is a silent submission to prejudices that meet us on every
+side. The true normal attitude of the sexual invert (and I have known
+hundreds) with regard to his particular passion is not essentially
+different from that of the normal man with regard to his.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>It is noteworthy that even when the condition is regarded as morbid, and
+even when a life of chastity has, on this account, been deliberately
+chosen, it is very rare to find an invert expressing any wish to change
+his sexual ideals. The male invert cannot find, and has no desire to find,
+any sexual charm in a woman, for he finds all possible charms united in a
+man. And a woman invert writes: &quot;I cannot conceive a sadder fate than to
+be a woman&mdash;an average woman reduced to the necessity of loving a man!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>It will be seen that my conclusions under this head are in striking
+contrast to those of Westphal, who believed that every invert regarded
+himself as morbid, and probably show a much higher proportion of
+self-approving inverts than any previous series.<a name='2_FNanchor_224'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_224'><sup>[224]</sup></a> This is largely due
+to the fact that the cases were not obtained from the consulting-room, and
+that they represent in some degree the intellectual aristocracy of
+inversion, including individuals who, often not without severe struggles,
+have found consolation in the example of the Greeks, or elsewhere, and
+have succeeded in attaining a <i>modus vivendi</i> with the moral world, as
+they have come to conceive it.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_183'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_183'>[183]</a> The following analysis is based on somewhat fuller versions
+of my Histories than it was necessary to publish in the preceding
+chapters, as well as on various other Histories which are not here
+published at all. Numerous apparent discrepancies may thus be explained.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_184'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_184'>[184]</a> This frequency of nervous symptoms is in accordance with
+the most reliable observation everywhere. Thus, Hirschfeld (<i>Die
+Homosexualit&auml;t</i>, p. 177) states that of 500 inverts, 62 per cent. showed
+nervous symptoms of one kind or another: sleeplessness, sleepiness,
+tremors, stammering, etc.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_185'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_185'>[185]</a> Hirschfeld finds that 54 per cent, of inverts become
+conscious of their anomaly under the age of 14. The anomaly may, however,
+be present at this early age, but not consciously until later. Hence the
+larger percentage recorded above.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_186'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_186'>[186]</a> In this connection I may quote an observation by
+Raffalovich: &quot;It is natural that the invert should very clearly recall the
+precocity of his inclinations. In the existence of every invert a moment
+arrives when he discovers the enigma of his homosexual tastes. He then
+classes all his recollections, and to justify himself in his own eyes he
+remembers that he has been what he is from his earliest childhood.
+Homosexuality has colored all his young life; he has thought over it,
+dreamed over it, reflected over it&mdash;very often in perfect innocence. When
+he was quite small he imagined that he had been carried off by brigands,
+by savages; at 5 or 6 he dreamed of the warmth of their chests and of
+their naked arms. He dreamed that he was their slave and he loved his
+slavery and his masters. He has had not the least thought that is crudely
+sexual, but he has discovered his sentimental vocation.&quot;</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_187'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_187'>[187]</a> Leppmann mentions a case (certainly extreme and abnormal)
+of a little girl of 8 who spent the night hidden on the roof, merely in
+order to be able to observe in the morning the sexual organs of an adult
+male cousin (<i>Bulletin de l'Union Internationale de Droit P&eacute;nal</i>, 1896, p.
+118).</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_188'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_188'>[188]</a> I fully admit, as all investigators must, the difficulty of
+tracing the influence of early suggestions, especially in dealing with
+persons who are unaccustomed to self-analysis. Sometimes it happens,
+especially in regard to erotic fetichism, that, while direct questioning
+fails to reach any early formative suggestion, such influence is casually
+elicited on a subsequent occasion.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_189'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_189'>[189]</a> I may add that I see no fundamental irreconcilability
+between the point of view here adopted and the facts brought forward (and
+wrongly interpreted) by Schrenck-Notzing. In his <i>Beitr&auml;ge zur &AElig;tiologie
+der Contr&auml;rer Sexualempfindung</i> (Vienna, 1895), this writer states: &quot;The
+neuropathic disposition is congenital, as is the tendency to precocious
+appearance of the appetites, the lack of psychic resistance, and the
+tendency to imperative associations; but that heredity can extend to the
+object of the appetite, and influence the contents of these characters, is
+not shown. Psychological experiences are against it, and the possibility,
+which I have shown, of changing these impulses by experiment and so
+removing their danger to the character of the individual.&quot; It need not be
+asserted that &quot;heredity extends to the object of the appetite,&quot; but simply
+that heredity culminates in an organism which is sexually best satisfied
+by that object. It is also a mistake to suppose that congenital characters
+cannot be, in some cases, largely modified by such patient and laborious
+processes as those carried on by Schrenck-Notzing. In the same pamphlet
+this writer refers to moral insanity and idiocy as supporting his point of
+view. It is curious that both these congenital manifestations had
+independently occurred to me as arguments against his position. The
+experiences of Elmira Reformatory and Bic&ecirc;tre&mdash;not to mention institutions
+of more recent establishment&mdash;long since showed that both the morally
+insane and the idiotic can be greatly improved by appropriate treatment.
+Schrenck-Notzing seems to be unduly biased by his interest in hypnotism
+and suggestion.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_190'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_190'>[190]</a> &quot;If an invert acquires, under the influence of external
+conditions,&quot; F&eacute;r&eacute; wrote with truth (<i>L'Instinct Sexuel</i>, p. 238), &quot;it is
+because he was born with an aptitude for such acquisition: an aptitude
+lacking in those who have been subjected to the same conditions without
+making the same acquisitions.&quot;</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_191'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_191'>[191]</a> One of my subjects writes: &quot;Inverts are, I think, naturally
+more liable to indulge in self-gratification than normal people, partly
+because of the perpetual suppression and disappointment of their desires,
+and also because of the fact that they actually possess in themselves the
+desired form of the male. This idea is a little difficult of explanation,
+but you can readily imagine to what frenzies of self-abuse a normal man
+would be impelled supposing that he included in his own the form of the
+female.&quot;</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_192'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_192'>[192]</a> I do not here enter upon the consideration of the normal
+prevalence and significance of masturbation and allied phenomena, as I
+have dealt with this subject in the study of &quot;Auto-erotism,&quot; in volume i
+of these <i>Studies</i>.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_193'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_193'>[193]</a> Hirschfeld also finds, among German inverts (<i>Die
+Homosexualit&auml;t</i>, ch. iii), that the majority (though a smaller majority
+than I find in England and the United States) have not had intercourse
+with women; 53 per cent., he states, including a few married men, have
+never even attempted coitus, and over 50 per cent, are presumably
+impotent. The number of inverted women who have never had intercourse with
+men is still larger.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_194'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_194'>[194]</a> Otto Rank, <i>Imago</i>, Heft 3, 1913.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_195'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_195'>[195]</a> Erotic dreams have been discussed in &quot;Auto-erotism,&quot; vol. i
+of these <i>Studies</i>, and the wider bearings of the subject in another work,
+<i>The Study of Dreams</i>. Many references to the extensive literature will be
+found in both these places.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_196'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_196'>[196]</a> <i>E.g.</i>, <i>Archiv f&uuml;r Psychiatrie</i>, 1899; <i>Archiv f&uuml;r
+Kriminal-Anthropologie</i>, 1900.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_197'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_197'>[197]</a> Hirschfeld, <i>Die Homosexualit&auml;t</i>, p. 71 <i>et seq.</i>
+Hirschfeld considers that the dreams of the inverted fall into two groups:
+one in which the dreamer imagines he is embracing a person of the same
+sex, and another in which he imagines that he is himself of the opposite
+sex. The latter class of dreams, constituting a pseudo-heterosexual group,
+seems to me to be rare, and they may, moreover, occur in heterosexual
+persons.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_198'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_198'>[198]</a> See Thoinot and Weysse, <i>Medico-legal Aspects of Moral
+Offenses</i>, pp. 165, 291, etc.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_199'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_199'>[199]</a> <i>Pedicatio</i> (or <i>p&aelig;dicatio</i>) is the most generally accepted
+technical term for the sodomitical intromission of the penis into the
+anus. It is usually derived from the Greek <i>pais</i> (boy), but some
+authorities have derived it from <i>pedex</i> or <i>podex</i> (anus). The terms
+&quot;paiderastia&quot; and &quot;pederast&quot; are sometimes used to indicate the same act
+and agent. This use, however, is undesirable. It is best to confine the
+word &quot;paiderastia&quot; to its proper use as the name of the special
+institution of Greek boy love. It may be added that the Greeks themselves
+had many names (as many as 74) for paiderastia. See, on this subject of
+nomenclature, Iwan Bloch, <i>Der Ursprung der Syphilis</i>, vol. ii, pp. 527,
+563.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_200'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_200'>[200]</a> It is the grosser forms of perversion which are first
+revealed in every field. In the first edition of this Study the
+predominance of <i>pedicatio</i> was still greater; it is not practised by any
+of the subjects of the Histories added to the present edition, though
+several see no objection to it.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_201'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_201'>[201]</a> <i>Jahrbuch f&uuml;r sexuelle Zwischenstufen</i>, vol. viii, 1906, p.
+712.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_202'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_202'>[202]</a> Hirschfeld, <i>Die Homosexualit&auml;t</i>, p. 276 <i>et seq.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_203'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_203'>[203]</a> &quot;Men,&quot; remarks Q., &quot;tend to fall in love with boys or
+youths, boys or youths with grown men, feminine natures with virile
+natures and <i>vice vers&acirc;</i>, and different races with each other.&quot;</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_204'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_204'>[204]</a> Stubbes, in his <i>Anatomy of Abuses</i>, affirmed that &quot;players
+and play-haunters in their secret conclaves play the Sodomites,&quot; and
+refers to some recent examples of men who had been desperately enamoured
+of player-boys thus clad in women's apparel, so far as to solicit them by
+words, by letters, even actually to abuse them. Later on, in 1633, Prynne,
+in his <i>Histrio-Mastix</i> (part 1, p. 208 <i>et seq.</i>), strongly condemned
+&quot;this putting on of woman's array&quot; by actors on the same ground, and adds
+that he has heard credibly reported of a scholar of Balliol College that
+he was violently enamoured of a boy-player. In Japan, again where, as in
+China, woman's parts on the stage are taken by men (not always youths),
+the homosexuality of these players became, during the seventeenth and
+eighteenth centuries, so notorious that they constituted a class requiring
+special regulation as Joro, or prostitutes.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_205'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_205'>[205]</a> This was remarked by even the earliest modern writers on
+homosexuality, like H&ouml;ssli. See Hirschfeld, &quot;Vom Wesen der Liebe,&quot;
+<i>Jahrbuch f&uuml;r sexuelle Zwischenstufen</i>, vol. viii, 1906, p. 124 <i>et seq.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_206'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_206'>[206]</a> Similarly Numa Praetorius asserts (<i>Jahrbuch f&uuml;r sexuelle
+Zwischenstufen</i>, vol. viii, p. 732) that even the most virile homosexual
+men exhibit feminine traits, and adds that we could scarcely expect it to
+be otherwise when we find how constantly homosexual women show masculine
+traits.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_207'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_207'>[207]</a> N&auml;cke, &quot;Die Diagnose der Homosexualit&auml;t,&quot; <i>Neurologisches
+Centralblatt</i>, April 16, 1908.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_208'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_208'>[208]</a> So also among American boarding-school girls. Thus Margaret
+Otis (<i>Journal of Abnormal Psychology</i>, June, 1913) has described the
+attraction which negro girls exert on white girls at school. The
+correspondence of these lovers, and sometimes their method of sex
+gratification, may occasionally be of an even coarsely passionate nature.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_209'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_209'>[209]</a> See &quot;Sexual Selection in Man,&quot; vol. iv of these <i>Studies</i>.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_210'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_210'>[210]</a> Hirschfeld (<i>Die Homosexualit&auml;t</i>, p. 283) found that 55 per
+cent. of inverts are attracted to qualities unlike their own, and 45 per
+cent. to qualities resembling their own, without regard to whether these
+qualities belonged to the secondary sexual sphere. It may be added that as
+regards the age of the persons they are attracted to, Hirschfeld (p. 281)
+admits two main groups, each including about 45 per cent. of the
+homosexual; <i>ephebophils</i>, attracted to youths between 14 and 21, and
+<i>androphils</i>, attracted to adults in the prime of life. This division, as
+may be seen from the histories included in the present volume, seems to
+hold good of British and American inverts.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_211'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_211'>[211]</a> Hirschfeld, <i>Die Homosexualit&auml;t</i>, ch. v.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_212'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_212'>[212]</a> Krafft-Ebing tells of an inverted physician (a man of
+masculine development and tastes) who had had sexual relations with 600
+more or less inverted men. He observed no tendency to sexual malformation
+among them, but very frequently an approximation to a feminine form of
+body, as well as insufficient hair, delicate complexion, and high voice.
+Well-developed breasts were not rare, and some 10 per cent, showed a taste
+for feminine occupations.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_213'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_213'>[213]</a> A similar condition of gynecomasty has been observed in
+connection with inversion by Moll, Laurent, Wey, etc. Olano (&quot;La Secrecion
+Mamaria en los Invertidos Sexuales,&quot; <i>Archivos de Criminologia</i>, May,
+1902, p. 305) further observed a certain amount of mammary secretion in an
+inverted man, 20 years of age, in Lima.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_214'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_214'>[214]</a> Hirschfeld finds. 7 per cent, inverts left-handed, and 6
+per cent, partly so. Fliess attaches special importance to left-handedness
+in inversion, believing that in left-handed men feminine secondary sexual
+characters are marked, and in left-handed women masculine sexual character
+(<i>Der Ablauf des Lebens</i>, 1906). I am not prepared to deny this statement,
+but, more evidence is needed.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_215'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_215'>[215]</a> This point has been discussed by Hirschfeld, <i>Die
+Homosexualit&auml;t</i>, pp. 156-8.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_216'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_216'>[216]</a> Bloch (<i>The Sexual Life of Our Time</i>, p. 500) attaches
+importance to this peculiarity, but it must be remembered that a
+high-pitched voice occurs frequently in undoubtedly heterosexual men in
+whom it seems often associated with high intellectual ability (Havelock
+Ellis, <i>A Study of British Genius</i>, p. 200).</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_217'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_217'>[217]</a> See, <i>e.g.</i>, Hirschfeld, <i>Die Homosexualit&auml;t</i>, p. 151.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_218'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_218'>[218]</a> On the general signs of these conditions, see, <i>e.g.</i>, H.
+Meige, &quot;L'Infantilisme, Le F&eacute;minisme et les Hermaphrodites Antiques,&quot;
+<i>L'Anthropologie</i>. 1895; also Hastings Gilford, &quot;Infantilism,&quot; <i>Lancet</i>,
+February 28 and March 7, 1914.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_219'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_219'>[219]</a> Merzbach has dealt with the tendency of inverts to adopt
+special professions: &quot;Homosexualit&auml;t und Beruf,&quot; <i>Jahrbuch f&uuml;r sexuelle
+Zwischenstufen</i>, vol. iv, 1902.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_220'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_220'>[220]</a> Moll's experience in Germany also reveals the prevalence of
+inversion among literary men, though, of all occupations, he found the
+highest proportion among actors. J&auml;ger has referred to the frequency of
+homosexuality among barbers. I have been told that among London
+hairdressers homosexuality is so prevalent that there is even a special
+attitude which the client may adopt in the chair to make known that he is
+an invert. Dr. Kiernan informs me that in Chicago, also, inversion is
+specially prevalent among barbers, and he adds that he is acquainted with
+two cases among women-barbers, a relatively large proportion. It is not
+difficult to understand this, bearing in mind the close physical
+association between the barber and his client. &quot;W. G. was a barber's
+assistant,&quot; writes one of my subjects, &quot;and I took an immense fancy to him
+at first-sight. He used to lather me, and the touch of his fingers was a
+delight. Later on he shaved me and I always looked forward to going to the
+barber's. If he were not able to attend to me I felt an incredible sinking
+of heart. The whole day seemed dull and useless. I used to make a mark in
+my pocket-diary every time he shaved me.&quot;</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_221'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_221'>[221]</a> See, <i>e.g.</i>, &quot;Vom Weibmann auf der B&uuml;hne,&quot; <i>Jahrbuch f&uuml;r
+sexuelle Zwischenstufen</i>, vol. iii, 1901, p. 313. It is curious to find a
+medico-legal record of this connection long before inversion was
+recognized. In June, 1833 (see <i>Annual Register</i> under this date), a man
+died who had lived as a kept woman under the name of Eliza Edwards. He was
+very effeminate in appearance, with beautiful hair, in ringlets two feet
+long, and a cracked voice; he played female parts in the theater, &quot;in the
+first line of tragedy,&quot; and &quot;appeared as a most lady-like woman.&quot; The
+coroner's jury &quot;strongly recommended to the proper authorities that some
+means may be adopted in the disposal of the body which will mark the
+ignominy of the crime.&quot;</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_222'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_222'>[222]</a> A. Schmid, &quot;Zur Homosexualit&auml;t,&quot; <i>Zentralblatt f&uuml;r
+Psychoanalyse</i>, vol. i, 1913, p. 237.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_223'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_223'>[223]</a> See for a summary of various statistics in several
+countries, Havelock Ellis, <i>Man and Woman</i>, 5th ed., 1914, p. 174; also
+<i>ib.</i>, &quot;The Psychology of Red,&quot; <i>Popular Science Monthly</i>, August and
+September, 1900.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_224'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_224'>[224]</a> The proportion is not so large, however, as Hirschfeld
+(<i>Die Homosexualit&auml;t</i>, p. 314) now finds in Germany, where inverts are
+better informed on the subject of this anomaly, for here 95 per cent.
+regard their feelings as natural.</p></div>
+
+
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<h3><a name='2_CHAPTER_VI'></a><a name='2_Page_302'></a>CHAPTER VI.&mdash;THE THEORY OF SEXUAL INVERSION.</h3>
+
+<div class='blkquot'><p>What is Sexual Inversion?&mdash;Causes of Diverging Views&mdash;The Theory of
+Suggestion Unworkable&mdash;Importance of the Congenital Element in
+Inversion&mdash;The Freudian Theory&mdash;Embryonic Hermaphroditism as a Key to
+Inversion&mdash;Inversion as a Variation or &quot;Sport&quot;&mdash;Comparison with
+Color-blindness, Color-hearing, and Similar Abnormalities&mdash;What is an
+Abnormality?&mdash;Not Necessarily a Disease&mdash;Relation of Inversion to
+Degeneration&mdash;Exciting Causes of Inversion&mdash;Not Operative in the Absence
+of Predisposition.</p></div>
+
+<p>The analysis of these cases leads directly up to a question of the first
+importance: What is sexual inversion? Is it, as many would have us
+believe, an abominably acquired vice, to be stamped out by the prison? or
+is it, as a few assert, a beneficial variety of human emotion which should
+be tolerated or even fostered? Is it a diseased condition which qualifies
+its subject for the lunatic asylum? or is it a natural monstrosity, a
+human &quot;sport,&quot; the manifestations of which must be regulated when they
+become antisocial? There is probably an element of truth in more than one
+of these views. Very widely divergent views of sexual inversion are
+largely justified by the position and attitude of the investigator. It is
+natural that the police-official should find that his cases are largely
+mere examples of disgusting vice and crime. It is natural that the asylum
+superintendent should find that we are chiefly dealing with a form of
+insanity. It is equally natural that the sexual invert himself should find
+that he and his inverted friends are not so very unlike ordinary persons.
+We have to recognize the influence of professional and personal bias and
+the influence of environment.</p>
+
+<p>There have been two main streams of tendency in the views regarding sexual
+inversion: one seeking to enlarge the sphere of the acquired (represented
+by Binet,&mdash;who, however, recognized predisposition,&mdash;Schrenck-Notzing, and
+recently the<a name='2_Page_303'></a> Freudians), the other seeking to enlarge the sphere of the
+congenital (represented by Krafft-Ebing, Moll, F&eacute;r&eacute;, and today by the
+majority of authorities). There is, as usually happens, truth in both
+these views. But, inasmuch as those who represent the acquired view often
+deny any congenital element, we are called upon to discuss the question.
+The view that sexual inversion is entirely explained by the influence of
+early association, or of &quot;suggestion,&quot; is an attractive one and at first
+sight it seems to be supported by what we know of erotic fetichism, by
+which a woman's hair, or foot, or even clothing, becomes the focus of a
+man's sexual aspirations. But it must be remembered that what we see in
+erotic fetichism is merely the exaggeration of a normal impulse; every
+lover is to some extent excited by his mistress's hair, or foot, or
+clothing. Even here, therefore, there is really what may fairly be
+regarded as a congenital element; and, moreover, there is reason to
+believe that the erotic fetichist usually displays the further congenital
+element of hereditary neurosis. Therefore, the analogy with erotic
+fetichism does not bring much help to those who argue that inversion is
+purely acquired. It must also be pointed out that the argument for
+acquired or suggested inversion logically involves the assertion that
+normal sexuality is also acquired or suggested. If a man becomes attracted
+to his own sex simply because the fact or the image of such attraction is
+brought before him, then we are bound to believe that a man becomes
+attracted to the opposite sex only because the fact or the image of such
+attraction is brought before him. Such a theory is unworkable. In nearly
+every country of the world men associate with men, and women with women;
+if association and suggestion were the only influential causes, then
+inversion, instead of being the exception, ought to be the rule throughout
+the human species, if not, indeed, throughout the whole zo&ouml;logical series.
+We should, moreover, have to admit that the most fundamental human
+instinct is so constituted as to be equally well adapted for sterility as
+for that propagation of the race which, as a matter of fact, we find
+dominant throughout the whole of life. We must, therefore, put aside
+entirely the notion <a name='2_Page_304'></a>that the direction of the sexual impulse is merely a
+suggested phenomenon; such a notion is entirely opposed to observation and
+experience, and will with difficulty fit into a rational biological
+scheme.</p>
+
+<p>The Freudians&mdash;alike of the orthodox and the heterodox schools&mdash;have
+sometimes contributed, unintentionally or not, to revive the now
+antiquated conception of homosexuality as an acquired phenomenon, and that
+by insisting that its mechanism is a purely psychic though unconscious
+process which may be readjusted to the normal order by psychoanalytic
+methods. Freud first put forth a comprehensive statement of his view of
+homosexuality in the original and pregnant little book, <i>Drei Abhandlungen
+zur Sexualtheorie</i> (1905), and has elsewhere frequently touched on the
+subject, as have many other psychoanalysts, including Alfred Adler and
+Stekel, who no longer belong to the orthodox Freudian school. When inverts
+are psycho-analytically studied, Freud believes, it is found that in early
+childhood they go through a phase of intense but brief fixation on a
+woman, usually the mother, or perhaps sister. Then, an internal censure
+inhibiting this incestuous impulse, they overcome it by identifying
+themselves with women and taking refuge in Narcissism, the self becoming
+the sexual object. Finally they look for youthful males resembling
+themselves, whom they love as their mothers loved them. Their pursuit of
+men is thus determined by their flight from women. This view has been set
+forth not only by Freud but by Sadger, Stekel, and many others.<a name='2_FNanchor_225'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_225'><sup>[225]</sup></a> Freud
+himself, however, is careful to state that this process only represents
+one type of stunted sexual activity, and that the problem of inversion is
+complex and diversified.</p>
+
+<div class='blkquot'><p>This view may be said to assume a bisexual constitution as
+ normal, and homosexuality arises by the suppression, owing to
+ some accident, of the heterosexual component, and the path
+ through an autoerotic process of Narcissism to homosexuality. On
+ this general Freudian conception <a name='2_Page_305'></a>of homosexuality numerous
+ variations have been based, and separate features specially
+ emphasized, by individual psychoanalysts. Thus Sadger considers
+ that, beneath the male individual loved by the invert, a female
+ is concealed, and that this fact may be revealed by
+ psychoanalysis which removes the upper layer of the psychic
+ palimpsest; he believes that this disposition of the invert is
+ favored by a frequent mixture of male and female traits in his
+ near relatives; originally, &quot;it is not man whom the homosexual
+ man loves and desires but man and woman together in one form&quot;;
+ the heterosexual element is later suppressed, and then pure
+ inversion is left. Further, developing Freud's view of the
+ importance of anal eroticism (Freud, <i>Sammlung Kleiner Schriften
+ zur Neurosenlehre</i>, vol. ii), Sadger thinks that it is even the
+ rule for a passive invert to have experienced anal eroticism in
+ childhood and been frequently subjected to enemas, which have led
+ to the desire for the anal intromission of the penis.
+ (<i>Medizinische Klinik</i>, 1909, No. 2.) Jekels pushes this doctrine
+ further and declares that all inverts are really passive; the
+ invert is, in his love, he states, both subject and object; he
+ identifies himself with his mother and sees in the object of his
+ love his own youthful person. And what, Jekels asks, is the aim
+ of this mental arrangement? It can scarcely by other, he replies,
+ than in the part of the mother to stimulate the anal region of
+ the object which has now become himself, and to procure the same
+ pleasure which in childhood he experienced when his mother
+ satisfied his anal eroticism. Jekels regards this view as the
+ continuation and concretization of Freud's interpretation; and
+ the main point in homosexuality, even when apparently passive,
+ becomes the craving for anal-erotic satisfaction (L. Jekels,
+ &quot;Einige Bemerkungen zur Trieblehre,&quot; <i>Internationale Zeitschrift
+ f&uuml;r Aerztliche Psychoanalyse</i>, Sept., 1913). Most psychoanalysts
+ are cautious in denying a constitutional or congenital basis to
+ inversion, though they leave it in the background. Ferenczi, in
+ an interesting attempt to classify the homosexual
+ (<i>Internationale Zeitschrift f&uuml;r Aerztliche Psychoanalyse</i>,
+ March, 1914), remarks: &quot;Psychoanalytic investigation shows that
+ under the name of homosexuality the most various psychic states
+ are thrown together, on the one hand true constitutional
+ anomalies (inversion, or subject homoeroticism), on the other
+ hand psychoneurotic obsessional conditions (object homoeroticism,
+ or obsessional homoeroticism). The individual of the first kind
+ essentially feels himself a woman who wishes to be loved by a
+ man, while the other represents a neurotic flight from women
+ rather than sympathy to men.&quot; The constitutional basis is very
+ definitely accepted by Rudolf Ortvay who points out
+ (<i>Internationale Zeitschrift f&uuml;r Aerztliche Psychoanalyse</i>, Jan.,
+ 1914) that the biological doctrine of recessives and dominants in
+ heredity helps to make clear the emergence or suppression of
+ <a name='2_Page_306'></a>homosexuality on a bisexual disposition. &quot;Infantile events,&quot; he
+ adds, &quot;which, according to Freud, decide the sexual relations of
+ adults, can only exert their operation on the foundation of an
+ organic predisposition, infantile impressions being determined by
+ hereditary predisposition.&quot; Isador Coriat, on the other hand,
+ while recognizing two forms of inversion, incomplete and
+ complete, boldly asserts that it is never congenital and never
+ transmitted through heredity; it is always &quot;originated through a
+ definite unconscious mechanism&quot; (Coriat, &quot;Homosexuality,&quot; <i>New
+ York Medical Journal</i>, March 22, 1913). Adler's view of
+ homosexuality, as of other allied conditions, differs from that
+ of most psychoanalysts by insisting on the presence of an
+ original organic defect which the subject seeks to fortify into a
+ point of strength; he accepts two chief components of inversion:
+ a vagueness as to sexual differences and a process of
+ self-assurance in the form of rebellion and defiance, and even
+ the feminism of the invert may become a method of gaining power
+ (A. Adler, <i>Ueber den Neur&ouml;sen Charakter</i>, 1912, p. 21). </p></div>
+
+<p>The mechanism of the genesis of homosexuality put forward by Freud need
+not be dismissed offhand. Freud has often manifested the insight of
+genius, and he refrains from molding his conceptions in those inflexible
+shapes which have sometimes been adopted by the more dogmatic
+psychoanalysts who have followed him. Nor need we be unduly shocked by the
+&quot;incestuous&quot; air of the &quot;&OElig;dipus Complex,&quot;<a name='2_FNanchor_226'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_226'><sup>[226]</sup></a> as it is commonly
+called, which figures as a component of the process. The word &quot;incest,&quot;
+though it has been used by Freud himself, seems scarcely a proper word to
+apply to the vague and elementary feelings of children, especially when
+those feelings scarcely pass beyond a stage of non-localized and therefore
+really presexual feelings (in the ordinary use of the term &quot;sexual&quot;) which
+may be regarded as natural and normal. The Freudian conception is
+misrepresented and prejudiced by the statement that it involves
+&quot;incest.&quot;<a name='2_FNanchor_227'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_227'><sup>[227]</sup></a><a name='2_Page_307'></a> When a child loves its mother with an entire love, that
+love necessarily involves the germs which in later life become separated
+and developed into sexual love, but it is inaccurate to term this love of
+the child &quot;incestuous.&quot; It is quite easily conceivable that the psychic
+mechanism of the establishment of homosexuality has in some cases
+corresponded to the course described by Freud. It may also be admitted
+that, as psychoanalysts claim, the pronounced <i>horror femin&aelig;</i> occasionally
+found in male inverts may plausibly be regarded as the reversal of an
+early and disappointed feminine attraction. But it is impossible to regard
+this mechanism as invariable or even frequent. It is quite true, and I
+have found ample evidence of the fact, that inverts are often very closely
+attached to their mothers, even to a greater degree, indeed, than is the
+rule among normal children, and often like to be in constant association
+with their mothers. But this attraction is quite misunderstood if it is
+regarded as a peculiarly sexual attraction. Indeed, the whole point of the
+attraction is that the inverted boy vaguely feels his own feminine
+disposition and so shuns the uncongenial amusements and society of his own
+sex for the sympathy and community of tastes which he finds concentrated
+in his mother. So far from such association being evidence of sexual
+attraction it might more reasonably be regarded as evidence of its
+absence; just as the association of boys among themselves, and of girls
+among themselves, even in co-educational schools, is proof of the
+prevalence of heterosexual rather than of homosexual feeling. Confirmation
+of this point of view may be found in the fact&mdash;overlooked and sometimes
+even denied by psychoanalysts&mdash;that frequently, even in early childhood
+and simultaneously with this community of feeling with his mother, the
+homosexual boy is already experiencing the predominant fascination of the
+male. He feels it long before the age at which Narcissism is apt to occur,
+<a name='2_Page_308'></a>or at which self-consciousness has become sufficiently developed to allow
+the internal censure on unpermitted emotions to operate, or any flight
+from them to take place. Moreover, while most authorities have rarely been
+able to find any clear evidence of the sexual attraction of male inverts
+in childhood to mother or sister,<a name='2_FNanchor_228'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_228'><sup>[228]</sup></a> an attraction of this kind to
+father or brother seems less difficult to find, and if found it is
+incompatible with the typical Freudian process. In my own observation,
+among the Histories here recorded, there are at least two clear examples
+of such an attraction in childhood. It must further be said that any
+theory of the etiology of homosexuality which leaves out of account the
+hereditary factor in inversion cannot be admitted. The evidence for the
+frequency of homosexuality among the near relatives of the inverted is now
+indisputable. I have traced it in a considerable proportion of cases, and
+in many of these the evidence is unquestionable and altogether independent
+of the statement of the subject himself, whose opinion may be held to be
+possibly biased or unreliable.<a name='2_FNanchor_229'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_229'><sup>[229]</sup></a> This hereditary factor seems indeed to
+be called for by the Freudian theory itself. On that theory we need to
+know how it is that the subject passes through psychic phases, and reaches
+an emotional disposition, so unlike that of normal persona. The existence
+of a definite hereditary tendency in a homosexual direction removes that
+difficulty. Freud himself recognizes this and clearly asserts congenital
+psycho-sexual constitution, which must involve predisposition. On a
+general survey, therefore, it would appear that, on the psychic side, we
+may accept the reality of unconscious dynamic processes which in
+particular cases may be of the Freudian or similar type. But while the
+study of such mechanisms may illuminate the psychology of homosexuality,
+<a name='2_Page_309'></a>they leave untouched the fundamental organic factors now accepted by most
+authorities.<a name='2_FNanchor_230'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_230'><sup>[230]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>The rational way of regarding the normal sexual instinct is as an inborn
+organic impulse, reaching full development about the time of puberty.<a name='2_FNanchor_231'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_231'><sup>[231]</sup></a>
+During the period of development suggestion and association may come in to
+play a part in defining the object of the emotion; the soil is now ready,
+but the variety of seeds likely to thrive in it is limited. That there is
+a greater indefiniteness in the aim of the sexual impulse at this period
+we may well believe. This is shown not only by occasional tentative signs
+of sexual emotion directed toward the same sex in childhood, but by the
+frequently ideal and unlocalized character of the normal passion even at
+puberty. But the channel of sexual emotion is not thereby turned into an
+abnormal path. Whenever this happens we are bound to believe&mdash;and we have
+many grounds for believing&mdash;that we are dealing with an organism which
+from the beginning is abnormal. The same seed of suggestion is sown in
+various soils; in the many it dies <a name='2_Page_310'></a>out; in the few it flourishes. The
+cause can only be a difference in the soil.</p>
+
+<p>If, then, we must postulate a congenital abnormality in order to account
+satisfactorily for at least a large proportion of sexual inverts, wherein
+does that abnormality consist? Ulrichs explained the matter by saying that
+in sexual inverts a male body coexists with a female soul: <i>anima
+muliebris in corpore virile inclusa</i>. Even writers of scientific eminence,
+like Magnan and Gley, have adopted this phrase in a modified form,
+considering that in inversion a female brain is combined with a male body
+or male glands. This is, however, not an explanation. It merely
+crystallizes into an epigram the superficial impression of the
+matter.<a name='2_FNanchor_232'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_232'><sup>[232]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>We can probably grasp the nature of the abnormality better if we reflect
+on the development of the sexes and on the latent organic bisexuality in
+each sex. At an early stage of development the sexes are
+indistinguishable, and throughout life the traces of this early community
+of sex remain. The hen fowl retains in a rudimentary form the spurs which
+are so large and formidable in her lord, and sometimes she develops a
+capacity to crow, or puts on male plumage. Among mammals the male
+possesses useless nipples, which occasionally even develop into breasts,
+and the female possesses a clitoris, which is merely a rudimentary penis,
+and may also develop. The sexually inverted person does not usually
+possess any gross exaggeration of these signs of community with the
+opposite sex. But, as we have seen, there are a considerable number of
+more subtle approximations to the opposite sex in inverted persons, both
+on the physical and the psychic side. Putting the matter in a purely
+speculative shape, it may be said that at conception the organism is
+provided with about 50 per cent. of male germs and about 50 per <a name='2_Page_311'></a>cent. of
+female germs, and that, as development proceeds, either the male or the
+female germs assume the upper hand, until in the maturely developed
+individual only a few aborted germs of the opposite sex are left. In the
+homosexual, however, and in the bisexual, we may imagine that the process
+has not proceeded normally, on account of some peculiarity in the number
+or character of either the original male germs or female germs, or both,
+the result being that we have a person who is organically twisted into a
+shape that is more fitted for the exercise of the inverted than of the
+normal sexual impulse, or else equally fitted for both.<a name='2_FNanchor_233'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_233'><sup>[233]</sup></a></p>
+
+<div class='blkquot'><p>The conception of the latent bisexuality of all males and females
+ cannot fail to be fairly obvious to intelligent observers of the
+ human body. It emerges at an early period in the history of
+ philosophic thought, and from the first was occasionally used for
+ the explanation of homosexuality. Plato's myth in the <i>Banquet</i>
+ and the hermaphroditic statues of antiquity show how acute minds,
+ working ahead of science, exercised themselves with these
+ problems. (For a fully illustrated study of the ancient
+ conception of hermaphroditism in sculpture see L. S. A. M. von
+ R&ouml;mer, &quot;Ueber die Androgynische Idee des Lebens,&quot; <i>Jahrbuch f&uuml;r
+ sexuelle Zwischenstufen</i>, vol. v, 1903, pp. 711-939.) Parmenides,
+ following Alcmaeon, the philosophic physician who discovered that
+ the brain is the central organ of intellect, remarks Gomperz
+ (<i>Greek Thinkers</i>, Eng. tr., vol. i, p. 183), used the idea of
+ variation in the proportion of male and female generative
+ elements to account for idiosyncrasies of sexual character. After
+ an immense interval H&ouml;ssli, the inverted Swiss man-milliner, in
+ his <i>Eros</i> (1838) put forth the Greek view anew. Schopenhauer,
+ again from the philosophical side, recognized the bisexuality of
+ the human individual (see Juliusburger, <i>Allgemeine Zeitschrift
+ f&uuml;r Psychiatrie</i>, 1912, p. 630), and Ulrichs, from 1862 onward,
+ adopted a similar doctrine, on a Platonic basis, to explain the
+ &quot;Uranian&quot; constitution. After this the idea began to be more
+ precisely developed from the scientific side, though not at first
+ with reference to homosexuality, and more especially by the great
+ pioneers of the doctrine of Evolution. Darwin emphasized the
+ significance of the facts on this point, as later Weismann, while
+ Haeckel, who was one of the earliest Darwinians, has in recent
+ years clearly recognized the bearing on the interpretation <a name='2_Page_312'></a>of
+ homosexuality of the fact that the ancestors of the vertebrates
+ were hermaphrodites, as vertebrates themselves still are in their
+ embryonic disposition (Haeckel, in <i>Jahrbuch f&uuml;r sexuelle
+ Zwischenstufen</i>, April, 1913, pp. 262-3, 287). This view had,
+ however, been set forth at an earlier date by individual
+ physicians, notably in America by Kiernan (<i>American Lancet</i>,
+ 1884, and <i>Medical Standard</i>, November and December, 1888), and
+ Lydston (<i>Philadelphia Medical and Surgical Reporter</i>, September,
+ 1889, and <i>Addresses and Essays</i>, 1892).</p>
+
+<p> In 1893, in his <i>L'Inversion Sexuelle</i>, Chevalier, a pupil of
+ Lacassagne&mdash;who had already applied the term &quot;hermaphrodisme
+ moral&quot; to this anomaly&mdash;explained congenital homosexuality by the
+ idea of latent bisexuality. Dr. G. de Letamendi, Dean of the
+ Faculty of Medicine of Madrid, in a paper read before the
+ International Medical Congress at Rome in 1894, set forth a
+ principle of panhermaphroditism&mdash;a hermaphroditic
+ bipolarity&mdash;which involved the existence of latent female germs
+ in the male, latent male germs in the female, which latent germs
+ may strive for, and sometimes obtain, the mastery. In February,
+ 1896, the first version of the present chapter, setting forth the
+ conception of inversion as a psychic and somatic development on
+ the basis of a latent bisexuality, was published in the
+ <i>Centralblatt f&uuml;r Nervenheilkunde und Psychiatrie</i>. Kurella
+ (<i>ib.</i>, May, 1890) adopted a somewhat similar view, even arguing
+ that the invert is a transitional form between the complete man
+ or woman and the hermaphrodite. In Germany a patient of
+ Krafft-Ebing had worked out the same idea, connecting inversion
+ with fetal bisexuality (eighth edition <i>Psychopathia Sexualis</i>,
+ p. 227). Krafft-Ebing himself at first simply asserted that,
+ whether congenital or acquired, there must be <i>Belastung</i>;
+ inversion is a &quot;degenerate phenomenon,&quot; a functional sign of
+ degeneration (Krafft-Ebing, &quot;Zur Erkl&auml;rung der contr&auml;ren
+ Sexualempfindung,&quot; <i>Jahrbuch f&uuml;r Psychiatrie</i>, 1894). In the
+ later editions of <i>Psychopathia Sexualis</i>, however (1896 and
+ onward and notably in <i>Jahrbuch f&uuml;r sexuelle Zwischenstufen</i>,
+ vol. iii, 1901), he went farther, adopting the explanation on the
+ lines of original bisexuality (English translation of tenth
+ edition, pp. 336-7). In much the same language as I have used he
+ argued that there has been a struggle in the centers,
+ homosexuality resulting when the center antagonistic to that
+ represented by the sexual gland conquers, and psycho-sexual
+ hermaphroditism resulting when both centers are too weak to
+ obtain victory, in either case such disturbance not being a
+ psychic degeneration or disease, but simply an anomaly comparable
+ to a malformation and quite consonant with psychic health. This
+ is the view now widely accepted by investigators of sexual
+ inversion. (Much material bearing on the history of this
+ conception has been brought together by Hirschfeld, in <i>Die
+ Homosexualit&auml;t</i>, ch. xix, and previously in &quot;Vom<a name='2_Page_313'></a> Wesen der
+ Liebe,&quot; <i>Jahrbuch f&uuml;r sexuelle Zwischenstufen</i>, vol. viii, 1906,
+ pp. 111-133.)</p>
+
+<p> A similar or allied view is now constantly met with in writers of
+ scientific authority who are only incidentally concerned with the
+ study of sexual inversion. Thus Halban (&quot;Die Entstehung des
+ Geschlechtscharaktere,&quot; <i>Archiv f&uuml;r Gyn&auml;kologie</i>, 1903) regards
+ hermaphroditism, which he would extend to the psychic sphere, as
+ a state in which a double sexual impulse determines the course of
+ fetal and later development. Shattock and Seligmann (&quot;True
+ Hermaphroditism in the Domestic Fowl, with Remarks on
+ Allopterotism,&quot; <i>Transactions of Pathological Society of London</i>,
+ vol. lvii, part i, 1906), pointing out that mere atrophy of the
+ ovary cannot account for the appearance in the hen bird of male
+ characters which are not retrogressive but progressive, argues
+ that such birds are really bisexual or hermaphrodite, either by
+ the single &quot;ovary&quot; being really bisexual, as was the case with a
+ fowl they examined, or that the sexual glands are paired, one
+ being male and the other female, or else that there is misplaced
+ male tissue in a neighboring viscus like the adrenal or kidney,
+ the male elements asserting themselves when the female elements
+ degenerate. &quot;Hermaphroditism,&quot; they conclude, &quot;far from being a
+ phenomenon altogether abnormal amongst the higher vertebrates,
+ should be viewed rather as a reversion to the primitive ancestral
+ phase in which bisexualism was the normal disposition.... True
+ hermaphroditism in man being established, the question arises
+ whether lesser grades do not occur.... Remote evidence of
+ bisexuality in the human subject may, perhaps, be afforded by the
+ psychical phenomenon of sexual perversion and inversion.&quot;
+ Similarly in a case of unilateral secondary male character in an
+ otherwise female pheasant, C. J. Bond has more recently shown
+ (Section of Zo&ouml;logy, Birmingham Meeting of British Medical
+ Association, <i>British Medical Journal</i>, Sept. 20, 1913) that an
+ ovi-testis was present, with degenerating ovarian tissue and
+ developing testicular tissue, and such islands of actively
+ growing male tissue can frequently be found, he states, in the
+ degenerating ovaries of female birds which have put forth male
+ plumage. Sir John Bland-Sutton, referring to the fact that the
+ external conformation of the body affords no positive certainty
+ as to the nature of the internal sexual glands, adds (<i>British
+ Medical Journal</i>, Oct. 30, 1909): &quot;It is a fair presumption that
+ some examples of sexual frigidity and sex perversion may be
+ explained by the possibility that the individuals concerned may
+ possess sexual glands opposite in character to those indicated by
+ the external configuration of their bodies.&quot; Looking at the
+ matter more broadly and fundamentally in its normal aspects,
+ Heape declares (<i>Proceedings of the Cambridge Philosophical
+ Society</i>, vol. xiv, part ii, 1907) that &quot;there is no such thing
+ as a pure male or female <a name='2_Page_314'></a>animal, but that all contain a dominant
+ and recessive sex, except those hermaphrodites in which both
+ sexes are equally represented.... There seems to me ample
+ evidence for the conclusion that there is no such thing as a pure
+ male or female.&quot; F. H. A. Marshall, again, in his standard manual,
+ <i>The Physiology of Reproduction</i> (1910, p. 655 <i>et seq.</i>), is
+ inclined to accept the same view. &quot;If it be true,&quot; he remarks,
+ &quot;that all individuals are potentially bisexual and that changed
+ circumstances, leading to a changed metabolism, may, in
+ exceptional circumstances, even in adult life, cause the
+ development of the recessive characters, it would seem extremely
+ probable that the dominance of one set of sexual characters over
+ the other may be determined in some cases at an early stage of
+ development in response to a stimulus which may be either
+ internal or external.&quot; So also Berry Hart (&quot;Atypical Male and
+ Female Sex-Ensemble,&quot; a paper read before Edinburgh Obstetrical
+ Society, <i>British Medical Journal</i>, June 20, 1914, p. 1355)
+ regards the normal male or female as embodying a maximum of the
+ potent organs of his or her own sex with a minimum of non-potent
+ organs of the other sex, with secondary sex traits congruent. Any
+ increase in the minimum gives a diminished maximum and
+ non-congruence of the secondary characters. </p></div>
+
+<p>We thus see that the ancient medico-philosophic conception of organic
+bisexuality put forth by the Greeks as the key to the explanation of
+sexual inversion, after sinking out of sight for two thousand years, was
+revived early in the nineteenth century by two amateur philosophers who
+were themselves inverted (H&ouml;ssli, Ulrichs), as well as by a genuine
+philosopher who was not inverted (Schopenhauer). Then the conception of
+latent bisexuality, independently of homosexuality, was developed from the
+purely scientific side (by Darwin and evolutionists generally). In the
+next stage this conception was adopted by the psychiatric and other
+scientific authorities on homosexuality (Krafft-Ebing and the majority of
+other students). Finally, embryologists, physiologists of sex and
+biologists generally, not only accept the conception of bisexuality, but
+admit that it probably helps to account for homosexuality. In this way the
+idea may be said to have passed into current thought. We cannot assert
+that it constitutes an adequate explanation of homosexuality, but it
+enables us in some degree to understand what for many is a mysterious
+riddle, and it furnishes <a name='2_Page_315'></a>a useful basis for the classification not only
+of homosexuality, but of the other mixed or intermediate sexual anomalies
+in the same group. The chief of these intermediate sexual anomalies are:
+(1) physical hermaphroditism in its various stages; (2) gynandromorphism,
+or eunuchoidism, in which men possess characters resembling those of males
+who have been early castrated and women possess similarly masculine
+characters; (3) sexo-esthetic inversion, or Eonism (Hirschfeld's
+transvestism or cross-dressing), in which, outside the specifically sexual
+emotions, men possess the tastes of women and women those of men.</p>
+
+<div class='blkquot'><p>Hirschfeld has discussed these intermediate sexual stages in
+ various works, especially in <i>Geschlechts&uuml;berg&auml;nge</i> (1905), <i>Die
+ Transvestiten</i> (1910), and ch. xi of <i>Die Homosexualit&auml;t</i>.
+ Hermaphroditism (the reality of which has only of late been
+ recognized and is still disputed) and pseudohermaphroditism; in
+ their physical variations are fully dealt with in the great work,
+ richly illustrated, <i>Hermaphroditismus beim Menschen</i>, by F. L.
+ von Neugebauer, of Warsaw. Neugebauer published an earlier and
+ briefer study of the subject in the <i>Jahrbuch f&uuml;r sexuelle
+ Zwischenstufen</i> vol. iv, 1902, pp. 1-176, with a bibliography in
+ vol. viii (1906) of the same <i>Jahrbuch</i>, pp. 685-700. Hirschfeld
+ emphasizes the fact that neither hermaphroditism nor eunuchoidism
+ is commonly associated with homosexuality, and that a large
+ proportion of the cases of transvestism, as defined by him, are
+ heterosexual. True inversion seems, however, to be not
+ infrequently found among pseudohermaphrodites; Neugebauer records
+ numerous cases; Magnan has published a case in a girl brought up
+ as a youth (<i>Gazette m&eacute;dical de Paris</i>, March 31, 1911) and
+ Lapointe a case in a man brought up as a girl (<i>Revue de
+ psychiatrie</i>, 1911, p. 219). Such cases may be accounted for by
+ the training and associations involved by the early error in
+ recognition of sex, and perhaps still more by a really organic
+ predisposition to homosexuality, although the sexual psychic
+ characters are not necessarily bound up with the coexistence of
+ corresponding sexual glands. Halban (<i>Archiv f&uuml;r Gyn&auml;kologie</i>
+ 1903) goes so far as to class the homosexual as &quot;real
+ pseudohermaphrodites,&quot; exactly comparable to a man with a female
+ breast or a woman with a beard, and proposes to term
+ homosexuality &quot;pseudohermaphroditus masculinus psychicus.&quot; This,
+ however, is an unnecessary and scarcely satisfactory confusion. </p></div>
+
+<p>To place the group of homosexual phenomena among other intermediate groups
+on the organic bisexual basis is a convenient <a name='2_Page_316'></a>classification. It can
+scarcely be regarded as a complete explanation. It is probable that we may
+ultimately find a more fundamental source of these various phenomena in
+the stimulating and inhibiting play of the internal secretions.<a name='2_FNanchor_234'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_234'><sup>[234]</sup></a> Our
+knowledge of the intimate association between the hormones and sexual
+phenomena is already sufficient to make such an explanation intelligible;
+the complex interaction of the glandular internal secretions and their
+liability to varying disturbance in balance may well suffice to account
+for the complexity of the phenomena. It would harmonize with what we know
+of the occasional delayed manifestations of homosexuality, and would not
+clash with their congenital nature, for we know that a disordered state of
+the thymus, for instance, may be hereditary, and it is held that status
+lymphaticus may be either inborn or acquired.<a name='2_FNanchor_235'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_235'><sup>[235]</sup></a> Normal sexual
+characters seem to depend largely upon the due co-ordination of the
+internal secretions, and it is reasonable to suppose that sexual
+deviations depend upon their inco-ordination. If a man is a man, and a
+woman a woman, because (in Blair Bell's phrase) of the totality of their
+internal secretions, the intermediate stages between the man and the woman
+must be due to redistribution of those internal secretions.<a name='2_FNanchor_236'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_236'><sup>[236]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>We know that various internal secretions possess an influential sexual
+effect. Thus the atrophy of the thymus seems to be connected with sexual
+development at puberty; the thyroid reinforces the genital glands; adrenal
+overdevelopment can produce in a female the secondary characteristics of
+the male, as well as cause precocious development of maleness; etc. &quot;An
+<a name='2_Page_317'></a>alteration in the metabolism,&quot; as F. H. A. Marshall suggests, &quot;even in
+comparatively late life, may initiate changes in the direction of the
+opposite sex.&quot; Metabolic chemical processes may thus be found to furnish a
+key to complex and subtle sexual variations, alike somatic and psychic,
+although we must still regard such processes as arising on an inborn
+predisposition.</p>
+
+<p>Whatever its ultimate explanation, sexual inversion may thus fairly be
+considered a &quot;sport,&quot; or variation, one of those organic aberrations which
+we see throughout living nature, in plants and in animals.</p>
+
+<p>It is not here asserted, as I would carefully point out, that an inverted
+sexual instinct, or organ for such instinct, is developed in early
+embryonic life; such a notion is rightly rejected as absurd. What we may
+reasonably regard as formed at an early stage of development is strictly a
+predisposition; that is to say, such a modification of the organism that
+it becomes more adapted than the normal or average organism to experience
+sexual attraction to the same sex. The sexual invert may thus be roughly
+compared to the congenital idiot, to the instinctive criminal, to the man
+of genius, who are all not strictly concordant with the usual biological
+variation (because this is of a less subtle character), but who become
+somewhat more intelligible to us if we bear in mind their affinity to
+variations. Symonds compared inversion to color-blindness; and such a
+comparison is reasonable. Just as the ordinary color-blind person is
+congenitally insensitive to those red-green rays which are precisely the
+most impressive to the normal eye, and gives an extended value to the
+other colors,&mdash;finding that blood is the same color as grass, and a florid
+complexion blue as the sky,&mdash;so the invert fails to see emotional values
+patent to normal persons, transferring those values to emotional
+associations which, for the rest of the world, are utterly distinct. Or we
+may compare inversion to such a phenomenon as color-hearing, in which
+there is not so much defect as an abnormality of nervous tracks producing
+new and involuntary combinations. Just as the color-hearer instinctively
+associates colors with sounds, like the young<a name='2_Page_318'></a> Japanese lady who remarked
+when listening to singing, &quot;That boy's voice is red!&quot; so the invert has
+his sexual sensations brought into relationship with objects that are
+normally without sexual appeal.<a name='2_FNanchor_237'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_237'><sup>[237]</sup></a> And inversion, like color-hearing is
+found more commonly in young subjects, tending to become less marked, or
+to die out, after puberty. Color-hearing, while an abnormal phenomenon, it
+must be added, cannot be called a diseased condition, and it is probably
+much less frequently associated with other abnormal or degenerative
+stigmata than is inversion; there is often a congenital element, shown by
+the tendency to hereditary transmission, while the associations are
+developed in very early life, and are too regular to be the simple result
+of suggestion.<a name='2_FNanchor_238'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_238'><sup>[238]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>All such organic variations are abnormalities. It is important that we
+should have a clear idea as to what an abnormality is. Many people imagine
+that what is abnormal is necessarily diseased. That is not the case,
+unless we give the word disease an inconveniently and illegitimately wide
+extension. It is both inconvenient and inexact to speak of
+color-blindness, criminality, and genius as diseases in the same sense as
+we speak of scarlet fever or tuberculosis or general paralysis as
+diseases. Every congenital abnormality is doubtless due to a peculiarity
+in the sperm or oval elements or in their mingling, or to some disturbance
+in their early development. But the same may doubtless be said of the
+normal dissimilarities between brothers and sisters. It is quite true that
+any of these aberrations may be due to antenatal disease, but to call them
+<a name='2_Page_319'></a>abnormal does not beg that question. If it is thought that any authority
+is needed to support this view, we can scarcely find a weightier than that
+of Virchow, who repeatedly insisted on the right use of the word
+&quot;anomaly,&quot; and who taught that, though an anomaly may constitute a
+predisposition to disease, the study of anomalies&mdash;pathology, as he called
+it, teratology as we may perhaps prefer to call it&mdash;is not the study of
+disease, which he termed nosology; the study of the abnormal is perfectly
+distinct from the study of the morbid. Virchow considers that the region
+of the abnormal is the region of pathology, and that the study of disease
+must be regarded distinctly as nosology. Whether we adopt this
+terminology, or whether we consider the study of the abnormal as part of
+teratology, is a secondary matter, not affecting the right understanding
+of the term &quot;anomaly&quot; and its due differentiation from the term &quot;disease.&quot;</p>
+
+<div class='blkquot'><p>At the Innsbruck meeting of the German Anthropological Society,
+ in 1894, Virchow thus expressed himself: &quot;In old days an anomaly
+ was called &#960;&#8049;&#952;&#959;&#962;, and in this sense every departure
+ from the norm is for me a pathological event. If we have
+ ascertained such a pathological event, we are further led to
+ investigate what <i>pathos</i> was the special cause of it.... This
+ cause may be, for example, an external force, or a chemical
+ substance, or a physical agent, producing in the normal condition
+ of the body a change, an anomaly (&#960;&#8049;&#952;&#959;&#962;). This can become
+ hereditary under some circumstances, and then become the
+ foundation for certain small hereditary characters which are
+ propagated in a family; in themselves they belong to pathology,
+ even although they produce no injury. For I must remark that
+ pathological does not mean harmful; it does not indicate disease;
+ disease in Greek is &#957;&#8001;&#963;&#959;&#962;, and it is nosology that is
+ concerned with disease. The pathological under some circumstances
+ can be advantageous&quot; (<i>Correspondenz-blatt Deutsch Gesellschaft
+ f&uuml;r Anthropologie</i>, 1894). These remarks are of interest when we
+ are attempting to find the wider bearings of such an anomaly as
+ sexual inversion.</p>
+
+<p> This same distinction has more recently been emphasized by
+ Professor Aschoff (<i>Deutsche medizinische Wochenschrift</i>,
+ February 3, 1910; of. <i>British Medical Journal</i>, April 9, 1910,
+ p. 892), as against Ribbert and others who would unduly narrow
+ the conception of &#960;&#8049;&#952;&#959;&#962;. Aschoff points out that, not
+ merely for the sake of precision and uniformity of terminology
+ but of clear thinking, it is desirable that we should retain a
+ distinction in regard to which Galen and the ancient <a name='2_Page_320'></a>physicians
+ were very definite. They used &#960;&#8049;&#952;&#959;&#962; as the wider term
+ involving affection (<i>affectio</i>) in general, not necessarily
+ impairment of vital tissue; when that was involved there was
+ &#957;&#8001;&#963;&#959;&#962;, disease. We have to recognize the distinction
+ even if we reject the terminology. </p></div>
+
+<p>A word may be said as to the connection between sexual inversion and
+degeneration. In France especially, since the days of Morel, the stigmata
+of degeneration are much spoken of. Sexual inversion is frequently
+regarded as one of them: <i>i.e.</i>, as an episodic syndrome of a hereditary
+disease, taking its place beside other psychic stigmata, such as
+kleptomania and pyromania. Krafft-Ebing long so regarded inversion; it is
+the view of Magnan, one of the earliest investigators of
+homosexuality;<a name='2_FNanchor_239'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_239'><sup>[239]</sup></a> and it was adopted by M&ouml;bius. Strictly speaking, the
+invert is degenerate; he has fallen away from the genus. So is a
+color-blind person. But Morel's conception of degenerescence has
+unfortunately been coarsened and vulgarized.<a name='2_FNanchor_240'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_240'><sup>[240]</sup></a> As it now stands, we
+gain little or no information by being told that a person is a
+&quot;degenerate.&quot; It is only, as N&auml;cke constantly argued, when we find a
+complexus of well-marked abnormalities that we are fairly justified in
+asserting that we have to deal with a condition of degeneration. Inversion
+is sometimes found in such a condition. I have, indeed, already tried to
+suggest that a condition of diffused minor abnormality may be regarded as
+a basis of congenital inversion. In other words, inversion is bound up
+with a modification of the secondary sexual characters. But these
+anomalies and modifications are not invariable,<a name='2_FNanchor_241'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_241'><sup>[241]</sup></a> and are not usually
+of a serious character; inversion is rare in the profoundly degenerate. It
+is undesirable to call these modifications<a name='2_Page_321'></a> &quot;stigmata of degeneration,&quot; a
+term which threatens to disappear from scientific terminology, to become a
+mere term of literary and journalistic abuse. So much may be said
+concerning a conception or a phrase of which far too much has been made in
+popular literature. At the best it remains vague and unfitted for
+scientific use. It is now widely recognized that we gain little by
+describing inversion as a degeneration. N&auml;cke, who attached significance
+to the stigmata of degeneration when numerous, was especially active in
+pointing out that inverts are not degenerate, and frequently returned to
+this point. L&ouml;wenfeld, Freud, Hirschfeld, Bloch, Rohleder all reject the
+conception of sexual inversion as a degeneracy.</p>
+
+<div class='blkquot'><p>Moll is still unable to abandon altogether the position that
+ since inversion involves a disharmony between psychic disposition
+ and physical conformation we must regard it as morbid, but he
+ recognizes (like Krafft-Ebing) that it is properly viewed as
+ being on the level of a deformity, that is, an abnormality,
+ comparable to physical hermaphroditism. (A. Moll, &quot;Sexuelle
+ Zwischenstufen,&quot; <i>Zeitschrift f&uuml;r aerztliche Fortbildung</i>, No.
+ 24, 1904.) N&auml;cke repeatedly emphasized the view that inversion is
+ a congenital non-morbid abnormality; thus in the last year of his
+ life he wrote (<i>Zeitschrift f&uuml;r die Gesamte Neurologie und
+ Psychiatrie</i>, vol. xv, Heft 5, 1913): &quot;We must not conceive of
+ homosexuality as a degeneration or a disease, but at most as an
+ abnormality, due to a disturbance of development.&quot; L&ouml;wenfeld,
+ always a cautious and sagacious clinical observer, agreeing with
+ N&auml;cke and Hirschfeld, regards inversion as certainly an
+ abnormality, but not therefore morbid; it may be associated with
+ disease and degeneration, but is usually simply a variation from
+ the norm, not to be regarded as morbid or degenerate, and not
+ diminishing the value of the individual as a member of society
+ (L&ouml;wenfeld, <i>Ueber die sexuelle Konstitution</i>, 1911, p. 166; also
+ <i>Zeitschrift f&uuml;r Sexualwissenschaft</i>, Feb., 1908, and
+ <i>Sexual-Probleme</i>, April, 1908). Aletrino of Amsterdam pushes the
+ view that inversion is a non-morbid abnormality to an undue
+ extreme by asserting that &quot;the uranist is a normal variety of the
+ species <i>Homo sapiens</i>&quot; (&quot;Uranisme et D&eacute;g&eacute;n&eacute;rescence,&quot; <i>Archives
+ d'Anthropologie Criminelle</i>, Aug.-Sept., 1908); inversion may be
+ regarded as (in the correct sense of the word here adopted) a
+ pathological abnormality, but not as an anthropological human
+ variety comparable to the Negro or the Mongolian man. (For
+ further opinions in favor of inversion as an anomaly, see
+ Hirschfeld, <i>Die Homosexualit&auml;t</i>, p. 388 <i>et seq.</i>) <a name='2_Page_322'></a></p></div>
+
+<p>Sexual inversion, therefore, remains a congenital anomaly, to be classed
+with other congenital abnormalities which have psychic concomitants. At
+the very least such congenital abnormality usually exists as a
+predisposition to inversion. It is probable that many persons go through
+the world with a congenital predisposition to inversion which always
+remains latent and unroused; in others the instinct is so strong that it
+forces its own way in spite of all obstacles; in others, again, the
+predisposition is weaker, and a powerful exciting cause plays the
+predominant part.</p>
+
+<p>We are thus led to the consideration of the causes that excite the latent
+predisposition. A great variety of causes has been held to excite to
+sexual inversion. It is only necessary to mention those which I have found
+influential. The first to come before us is our school-system, with its
+segregation of boys and girls apart from each other during the periods of
+puberty and adolescence. Many inverts have not been to school at all, and
+many who have been pass through school-life without forming any passionate
+or sexual relationship; but there remain a large number who date the
+development of homosexuality from the influences and examples of
+school-life. The impressions received at the time are not less potent
+because they are often purely sentimental and without any obvious sensual
+admixture. Whether they are sufficiently potent to generate permanent
+inversion alone may be doubtful, but, if it is true that in early life the
+sexual instincts are less definitely determined than when adolescence is
+complete, it is conceivable, though unproved, that a very strong
+impression, acting even on a normal organism, may cause arrest of sexual
+development on the psychic side.</p>
+
+<p>Another exciting cause of inversion is seduction. By this I mean the
+initiation of the young boy or girl by some older and more experienced
+person in whom inversion is already developed, and who is seeking the
+gratification of the abnormal instinct. This appears to be a not uncommon
+incident in the early history of sexual inverts. That such
+seduction&mdash;sometimes <a name='2_Page_323'></a>an abrupt and inconsiderate act of mere sexual
+gratification&mdash;could by itself produce a taste for homosexuality is highly
+improbable; in individuals not already predisposed it is far more likely
+to produce disgust, as it did in the case of the youthful Rousseau. &quot;He
+only can be seduced,&quot; as Moll puts it, &quot;who is capable of being seduced.&quot;
+No doubt it frequently happens in these, as so often in more normal
+&quot;seductions,&quot; that the victim has offered a voluntary or involuntary
+invitation.</p>
+
+<p>Another exciting cause of inversion, to which little importance is usually
+attached, but which I find to have some weight, is disappointment in
+normal love. It happens that a man in whom the homosexual instinct is yet
+only latent, or at all events held in a state of repression, tries to form
+a relationship with a woman. This relationship may be ardent on one or
+both sides, but&mdash;often, doubtless, from the latent homosexuality of the
+lover&mdash;it comes to nothing. Such love-disappointments, in a more or less
+acute form, occur at some time or another to nearly everyone. But in these
+persons the disappointment with one woman constitutes motive strong enough
+to disgust the lover with the whole sex and to turn his attention toward
+his own sex. It is evident that the instinct which can thus be turned
+round can scarcely be strong, and it seems probable that in some of these
+cases the episode of normal love simply serves to bring home to the invert
+the fact that he is not made for normal love. In other cases, it
+seems,&mdash;especially those that are somewhat feeble-minded and
+unbalanced,&mdash;a love-disappointment really does poison the normal instinct,
+and a more or less impotent love for women becomes an equally impotent
+love for men. The prevalence of homosexuality among prostitutes may be, to
+a large extent, explained by a similar and better-founded disgust with
+normal sexuality.<a name='2_FNanchor_242'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_242'><sup>[242]</sup></a> <a name='2_Page_324'></a></p>
+
+<p>These three influences, therefore,&mdash;example at school, seduction,
+disappointment in normal love,&mdash;all of them drawing the subject away from
+the opposite sex and concentrating him on his own sex, are exciting causes
+of inversion; but they require a favorable organic predisposition to act
+on, while there are a large number of cases in which no exciting cause at
+all can be found, but in which, from earliest childhood, the subject's
+interest seems to be turned on his own sex, and continues to be so turned
+throughout life.</p>
+
+<p>At this point I conclude the analysis of the psychology of sexual
+inversion as it presents itself to me. I have sought only to bring out the
+more salient points, neglecting minor points, neglecting also those groups
+of inverts who may be regarded as of secondary importance. The average
+invert, moving in ordinary society, is a person of average general health,
+though very frequently with hereditary relationships that are markedly
+neurotic. He is usually the subject of a congenital predisposing
+abnormality, or complexus of minor abnormalities, making it difficult or
+impossible for him to feel sexual attraction to the opposite sex, and easy
+to feel sexual attraction to his own sex. This abnormality either appears
+spontaneously from the first, by development or arrest of development, or
+it is called into activity by some accidental circumstance.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_225'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_225'>[225]</a> See <i>passim, Jahrbuch f&uuml;r Psychoanalytische Forschungen,
+Zentralblatt f&uuml;r Psychoanalyse</i>, and <i>Internationale Zeitschrift f&uuml;r
+Aerztliche Psychoanalyse</i>; also Sadger, &quot;Zur Aetiologie der Kontr&auml;ren
+Sexualempfindung,&quot; <i>Medizinische Klinik</i>, 1909, No. 2.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_226'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_226'>[226]</a> For an exposition of this by an able English representative
+of Freudian doctrines, see Ernest Jones, &quot;The &OElig;dipus Complex As
+An Explanation of Hamlet's Mystery,&quot; <i>American Journal of Psychology</i>,
+January, 1910. </p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_227'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_227'>[227]</a> The love of relations may be tinctured by all degrees of
+sexual love, some of which are so faint and vague that they cannot be
+considered unnatural or abnormal; it is misleading to term them
+incestuous. The Russian novelist, Artzibascheff, in his <i>Sanine</i> described
+a brother's affection for his sister as thus touched with a perception of
+her sexual charm (I refer to the French translation), and the book has
+consequently been much abused as &quot;incestuous,&quot; though the attitude
+described is very pale and conventional compared to the romantic passion
+sung in Shelley's <i>Laon and Cythna</i>, or the tragic exaltation of the same
+passion in Ford's great play, &quot;<i>'Tis Pity She's a Whore</i>.&quot;</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_228'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_228'>[228]</a> Thus Numa Praetorius, a sagacious observer with, a very
+wide and thorough knowledge of homosexuality, finds himself quite unable
+to accept the &quot;&OElig;dipus Complex&quot; explanation of inversion
+(<i>Jahrbuch f&uuml;r sexuelle Zwischenstufen</i>, July, 1914, p. 362).</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_229'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_229'>[229]</a> It cannot be maintained that the frequency of inversion
+among the near relatives of inverts is a chance coincidence, for it must
+be remembered that few estimates of the prevalence of inversion yield a
+higher proportion than 3 per cent.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_230'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_230'>[230]</a> See also a discussion of the Freudian view by Hirschfeld,
+who concludes (<i>Die Homosexualit&auml;t</i>, p. 344) that we can only accept the
+Freudian mechanism as rare, and in all cases subordinate to organic
+predisposition.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_231'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_231'>[231]</a> It has been denied by some (Meynert, N&auml;cke, etc.) that
+there is any sexual <i>instinct</i> at all. I may as well, therefore, explain
+in what sense I use the word. (See also &quot;Analysis of the Sexual Impulse&quot;
+in vol. iii of these <i>Studies</i>.) I mean an inherited aptitude the
+performance of which normally demands for its full satisfaction the
+presence of a person of the opposite sex. It might be asserted that there
+is no such thing as an instinct for food, that it is all imitation, etc.
+In a sense this is true, but the automatic basis remains. A chicken from
+an incubator needs no hen to teach it to eat. It seems to discover eating
+and drinking, as it were, by chance, at first eating awkwardly and eating
+everything, until it learns what will best satisfy its organic mechanism.
+There is no instinct for food, it may be, but there is an instinct which
+is only satisfied by food. It is the same with the &quot;sexual instinct.&quot; The
+tentative and omnivorous habits of the newly hatched chicken may be
+compared to the uncertainty of the sexual instinct at puberty, while the
+sexual pervert is like a chicken that should carry on into adult age an
+appetite for worsted and paper. It may be added here that the question of
+the hereditary nature of the sexual instinct has been exhaustively
+discussed and decisively affirmed by Moll in his <i>Untersuchungen &uuml;ber die
+Libido Sexualis</i>, 1898. Moll attaches importance to the inheritance of the
+normal aptitudes for sexual reaction in an abnormally weak degree as a
+factor in the development of sexual perversions.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_232'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_232'>[232]</a> This view was revived in a modified form by N&auml;cke
+(<i>Zeitschrift f&uuml;r die gesamte Neurologie und Psychiatrie</i>, vol. xv, Heft
+5, 1913), who supposed that there may be an anatomical &quot;homosexual center&quot;
+in the brain; <i>i.e.</i>, a feminine libido-center in the inverted man, and a
+masculine libido-center in the inverted woman. He expressed a hope that in
+the future the brains of inverted persons would be more carefully
+investigated.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_233'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_233'>[233]</a> I do not present this view as more than a picture which
+helps us to realize the actual phenomena which we witness in
+homosexuality, although I may add that so able a teratologist as Dr. J. W.
+Ballantyne considers that &quot;it seems a very possible theory.&quot;</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_234'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_234'>[234]</a> This explanation of homosexuality has already been
+tentatively put forth. Thus, Iwan Bloch (<i>Sexual Life of Our Time</i>, ch.
+xix, Appendix) vaguely suggests a new theory of homosexuality as dependent
+on chemical influences. Hirschfeld also believes (<i>Die Homosexualit&auml;t</i>,
+ch. xx) that the study of the internal secretions is the path to the
+deepest foundations of inversion.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_235'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_235'>[235]</a> A. E. Garrod, &quot;The Thymus Gland in its Clinical Aspects,&quot;
+<i>British Medical Journal</i>, Oct. 3, 1914</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_236'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_236'>[236]</a> &quot;The pure female and the pure male are produced by all the
+internal secretions,&quot; Blair Bell, &quot;The Internal Secretions,&quot; <i>British
+Medical Journal</i>, Nov. 15, 1913.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_237'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_237'>[237]</a> After this chapter was first published (in the
+<i>Centralblatt f&uuml;r Nervenheilkunde</i>, February, 1896), F&eacute;r&eacute; also compared
+congenital inversion to color-blindness and similar anomalies (F&eacute;r&eacute;, &quot;La
+Descendance d'un Inverti,&quot; <i>Revue G&eacute;n&eacute;rale de Clinique et Th&eacute;rapeutique</i>,
+1896), while Ribot referred to the analogy with color-hearing (<i>Psychology
+of the Emotions</i>, part ii, ch. vii).</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_238'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_238'>[238]</a> See, <i>e.g.</i>, Flournoy, <i>Des Phenom&egrave;nes de Synopsie</i>,
+Geneva, 1893; and for a brief discussion of the general phenomena of
+synesthesia, E. Parish, <i>Hallucinations and Illusions (Contemporary
+Science Series</i>), chapter vii; Bleuler, article &quot;Secondary Sensations,&quot; in
+Tuke's <i>Dictionary of Psychological Medicine</i>; and Havelock Ellis, <i>Man
+and Woman</i>, 5th ed., 1915, pp. 181-4.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_239'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_239'>[239]</a> Magnan has in recent years reaffirmed this view (&quot;Inversion
+Sexuelle et Pathologic Mentale,&quot; <i>Revue de Psychoth&eacute;rapie</i>, March, 1914):
+&quot;The invert is a diseased person, a degenerate.&quot;</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_240'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_240'>[240]</a> It is this fact which has caused the Italians to be shy of
+using the word &quot;degeneration;&quot; thus, Marro, in his great work, <i>I
+Caratteri del Delinquenti</i>, made a notable attempt to analyze the
+phenomena lumped together as degenerate into three groups: atypical,
+atavistic, and morbid.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_241'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_241'>[241]</a> Hirschfeld and Burchard among 200 inverts found pronounced
+stigmata of degeneration in only 16 per cent. (Hirschfeld, <i>Die
+Homosexualit&auml;t</i>, ch. xx.)</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_242'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_242'>[242]</a> Alcohol has sometimes been considered an important exciting
+cause of homosexuality, and alcoholism is certainly not uncommon in the
+heredity of inverts; according to Hirschfeld (<i>Die Homosexualit&auml;t</i>, p.
+386) it is well marked in one of the parents in over 21 per cent, of
+cases. But it probably has no more influence as an exciting cause in the
+individual homosexual person than in the individual heterosexual person.
+From the Freudian standpoint, indeed, Abraham believes (<i>Zeitschrift f&uuml;r
+Sexualwissenschaft</i>, Heft 8, 1908) that even in normal persons alcohol
+removes the inhibition from a latent homosexuality, and Juliusburger from
+the same standpoint (<i>Zentralblatt f&uuml;r Psychoanalyse</i>, Heft 10 and 11,
+1912) thinks that the alcoholic tendency is unconsciously aroused by the
+homosexual impulse in order to reach its own gratification. But we may
+accept N&auml;cke's conclusions (<i>Allgemeine Zeitschrift f&uuml;r Psychiatrie</i>, vol.
+lxviii, 1911, p. 852), that (1) alcohol cannot produce homosexuality in
+persons not predisposed, that (2) it may arouse it in those who are
+predisposed, that (3) the action of alcohol is the same on the homosexual
+as the heterosexual, and that (4) alcoholism is not common among inverts.</p></div>
+
+
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<h3><a name='2_CHAPTER_VII'></a><a name='2_Page_325'></a>CHAPTER VII.&mdash;CONCLUSIONS.</h3>
+
+<div class='blkquot'><p>The Prevention of Homosexuality&mdash;The Influence of the
+School&mdash;Coeducation&mdash;The Treatment of Sexual
+Inversion&mdash;Castration&mdash;Hypnotism&mdash;Associational
+Therapy&mdash;Psycho-analysis&mdash;Mental and Physical Hygiene&mdash;Marriage&mdash;The
+Children of Inverts&mdash;The Attitude of Society&mdash;The Horror Aroused by
+Homosexuality&mdash;Justinian&mdash;The <i>Code Napol&eacute;on</i>&mdash;The State of the Law in
+Europe Today&mdash;Germany&mdash;England&mdash;What Should be our Attitude toward
+Homosexuality?</p></div>
+
+<p>Having now completed the psychological analysis of the sexual invert, so
+far as I have been able to study him, it only remains to speak briefly of
+the attitude of society and the law. First, however, a few words as to the
+medical and hygienic aspects of inversion. The preliminary question of the
+prevention of homosexuality is in too vague a position at present to be
+profitably discussed. So far as the really congenital invert is concerned,
+prevention can have but small influence; but sound social hygiene should
+render difficult the acquisition of homosexual perversity, or what has
+been termed pseudo-homosexuality. It is the school which is naturally the
+chief theater of immature and temporary homosexual manifestations, partly
+because school life largely coincides with the period during which the
+sexual impulse frequently tends to be undifferentiated, and partly because
+in the traditions of large and old schools an artificial homosexuality is
+often deeply rooted.</p>
+
+<div class='blkquot'><p>Homosexuality in English schools has already been briefly
+ referred to in chapter iii. As a precise and interesting picture
+ of the phenomena in French schools, I may mention a story by
+ Albert Nortal, <i>Les Adolescents Passionn&eacute;s</i> (1913), written
+ immediately after the author left college, though not published
+ until more than twenty-five years later, and clearly based on
+ personal observation and experience. As regards German schools,
+ see, <i>e.g.</i>, Moll, <i>Untersuchungen &uuml;ber die Libido Sexualis</i>, p.
+ 449 <i>et seq.</i>, and for sexual manifestations in early life
+ generally, the same author's <i>Sexual Life of the Child</i>; also
+ Hirschfeld,<a name='2_Page_326'></a> <i>Jahrbuch f&uuml;r sexuelle Zwischenstufen</i>, vol. v,
+ 1903, p. 47 <i>et seq.</i>, and, for references, Hirschfeld, <i>Die
+ Homosexualit&auml;t</i>, p. 46 <i>et seq.</i> </p></div>
+
+<p>While much may be done by physical hygiene and other means to prevent the
+extension of homosexuality in schools,<a name='2_FNanchor_243'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_243'><sup>[243]</sup></a> it is impossible, and even
+undesirable, to repress absolutely the emotional manifestations of sex in
+either boys or girls who have reached the age of puberty.<a name='2_FNanchor_244'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_244'><sup>[244]</sup></a> It must
+always be remembered that profoundly rooted organic impulses cannot be
+effectually combated by direct methods. Writing of a period two centuries
+ago, Casanova, in relating his early life as a seminarist trained to the
+priesthood, describes the precautions taken to prevent the youths entering
+each other's beds, and points out the folly of such precautions.<a name='2_FNanchor_245'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_245'><sup>[245]</sup></a> As
+that master of the human heart remarks, such prohibitions intensify the
+very evil they are intended to prevent by invoking in its aid the impulse
+to disobedience natural to every child of Adam and Eve, and the
+observation has often been repeated by teachers since. We probably have to
+recognize that a way to render such manifestations wholesome, as well as
+to prepare for the relationships of later life, is the adoption, so far as
+possible, of the method of coeducation of the sexes,<a name='2_FNanchor_246'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_246'><sup>[246]</sup></a>&mdash;not, of course,
+necessarily involving identity of education for both sexes,&mdash;since a
+certain amount of association between the sexes <a name='2_Page_327'></a>helps to preserve the
+healthiness of the sexual emotional attitude. Association between the
+sexes will not, of course, prevent the development of congenital
+inversion. In this connection it is pointed out by Bethe that it was
+precisely in Sparta and Lesbos, where homosexuality was most ideally
+cultivated, that the sexes, so far as we know, associated more freely than
+in any other Greek State.<a name='2_FNanchor_247'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_247'><sup>[247]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>The question of the treatment of homosexuality must be approached with
+discrimination, caution, and skepticism. Nowadays we can have but little
+sympathy with those who, at all costs, are prepared to &quot;cure&quot; the invert.
+There is no sound method of cure in radical cases.</p>
+
+<p>At one time the seemingly very radical method of castration was advocated
+and occasionally carried out, as in a case I have recorded in a previous
+chapter (History XXVI). Like all methods of treatment, it is sometimes
+believed to have been successful by those who carried it out. Usually,
+after a short period, it is found to be unsuccessful, and in some cases
+the condition, especially the mental condition, is rendered worse. It is
+not difficult to understand why this should be. Sexual inversion, is not a
+localized genital condition. It is a diffused condition, and firmly
+imprinted on the whole psychic state. There may be reasons for castration,
+or the slighter operation of vasectomy, but, although sexual tension may
+be thereby diminished, no authority now believes that any such operation
+will affect the actual inversion. Castration of the body in adult age
+cannot be expected to produce castration of the mind. Moll, F&eacute;r&eacute;, N&auml;cke,
+Bloch, Rohleder, Hirschfeld, are all either opposed to castration for
+inversion, or very doubtful as to any beneficial results.</p>
+
+<div class='blkquot'><p>In a case communicated to me by Dr. Shufeldt, an invert had
+ himself castrated at the age of 26 to diminish sexual desire,
+ make himself more like a woman, and to stop growth of beard. &quot;But
+ the only apparent physical effect,&quot; he wrote, &quot;was to increase my
+ weight<a name='2_Page_328'></a> 10 per cent., and render me a semi-invalid for the rest
+ of my life. After two years my sexuality decreased, but that may
+ have been due to satiety or to advancing years. I was also
+ rendered more easily irritated over trifles and more revengeful.
+ Terrible criminal auto-suggestions came into my head, never
+ experienced before.&quot; F&eacute;r&eacute; (<i>Revue de Chirurgie</i>, March 10, 1905)
+ published the case of an invert of English origin who had been
+ castrated. The inverted impulse remained unchanged, as well as
+ sexual desire and the aptitude for erection; but neurasthenic
+ symptoms, which had existed before, were aggravated; he felt less
+ capable to resist his impulses, became migratory in his habits of
+ life, and addicted to the use of laudanum. In a case recorded by
+ C. H. Hughes (<i>Alienist and Neurologist</i>, Aug., 1914) the results
+ were less unsatisfactory; in this case the dorsal nerve of the
+ penis was first excised, without any result (see also <i>Alienist
+ and Neurologist</i>, Feb., 1904, p. 70, as regards worse than
+ useless results of cutting the pudic nerve), and a year or so
+ later the testes were removed and the patient gained tranquillity
+ and satisfaction; his homosexual inclinations appeared to go, and
+ he began to show inclination for asexualized women, being
+ specially anxious to meet with a woman whose ovaries had been
+ removed on account of inversion. (Reference may also be made to
+ N&auml;cke, &quot;Die Ersten Kastrationen aus sozialen Grunden auf
+ europ&auml;ischen Boden,&quot; <i>Neurologisches Centralblatt</i>, 1909, No. 5,
+ and E. Wilhelm in <i>Juristisch-psychiatrische Grenzfragen</i>, vol.
+ viii, Heft 6 and 7, 1911.) </p></div>
+
+<p>More trust has usually been placed in the psychotherapeutical than the
+surgical treatment of homosexuality. At one time hypnotic suggestion was
+carried out very energetically on homosexual subjects. Krafft-Ebing seems
+to have been the first distinguished advocate of hypnotism for application
+to the homosexual. Dr. von Schrenck-Notzing displayed special zeal and
+persistency in this treatment. He undertook to treat even the most
+pronounced cases of inversion by courses lasting more than a year, and
+involving, in at least one case, nearly one hundred and fifty hypnotic
+sittings; he prescribed frequent visits to the brothel, previous to which
+the patient took large doses of alcohol; by prolonged manipulations a
+prostitute endeavored to excite erection, a process attended with varying
+results. It appears that in some cases this course of treatment was
+attended by a certain sort of success, to which an unlimited good will on
+the part of the patient, it is needless to say, largely <a name='2_Page_329'></a>contributed. The
+treatment was, however, usually interrupted by continual backsliding to
+homosexual practices, and sometimes, naturally, the cure involved a
+venereal disorder. The patient was enabled to marry and to beget
+children.<a name='2_FNanchor_248'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_248'><sup>[248]</sup></a> It is a method of treatment which seems to have found few
+imitators. This we need not regret. The histories I have recorded in
+previous chapters show that it is not uncommon for even a pronounced
+invert to be able sometimes to effect coitus. It often becomes easy if at
+the time he fixes his thoughts on images connected with his own sex. But
+the perversion remains unaffected; the subject is merely (as one of Moll's
+inverts expressed it) practising masturbation <i>per vaginam</i>. Such
+treatment is a training in vice, and, as Raffalovich points out, the
+invert is simply perverted and brought down to the vicious level which
+necessarily accompanies perversity.<a name='2_FNanchor_249'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_249'><sup>[249]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>There can be no doubt that in slight and superficial cases of
+homosexuality, suggestion may really exert an influence. We can scarcely
+expect it to exert such influence when the homosexual tendency is deeply
+rooted in an organic inborn temperament. In such cases indeed the subject
+may resist suggestion even when in the hypnotic state. This is pointed out
+by Moll, a great authority on hypnotism, and with much experience of its
+application to homosexuality, but never inclined to encourage an
+exaggerated notion of its efficacy in this field. Forel, who was also an
+authority on hypnotism, was equally doubtful as to its value in relation
+to inversion, especially in clearly inborn cases. Krafft-Ebing at the end
+said little about it, and N&auml;cke (who was himself without faith in this
+method of treating inversion) stated that he had been informed by the
+<a name='2_Page_330'></a>last homosexual case treated by Krafft-Ebing by hypnotism that, in spite
+of all good-will on the patient's side, the treatment had been quite
+useless. F&eacute;r&eacute;, also, had no belief in the efficacy of suggestive
+treatment, nor has Merzbach, nor Rohleder. Numa Praetorius states that the
+homosexual subjects he is acquainted with, who had been so treated, were
+not cured, and Hirschfeld remarks that the inverts &quot;cured&quot; by hypnotism
+were either not cured or not inverted.<a name='2_FNanchor_250'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_250'><sup>[250]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>Moll has shown his doubt as to the wide applicability of suggestive
+therapeutics in homosexuality by developing in recent years what he terms
+association-therapy. In nearly all perverse individuals, he points out,
+there is a bridge,&mdash;more or less weak, no doubt,&mdash;which leads to the
+normal sexual life. By developing such links of association with
+normality, Moll believes, it may be possible to exert a healing influence
+on the homosexual. Thus a man who is attracted to boys may be brought to
+love a boyish woman.<a name='2_FNanchor_251'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_251'><sup>[251]</sup></a> Indications of this kind have long been observed
+and utilized, though not developed into a systematic method of treatment.
+In the case of bisexual individuals, or of youthful subjects whose
+homosexuality is not fully developed, it is probable that this method is
+beneficial. It is difficult to believe, however, that it possesses any
+marked influence on pronounced and developed cases of inversion.<a name='2_FNanchor_252'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_252'><sup>[252]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>Somewhat the same aim as Moll's association-therapy, though on the basis
+of a more elaborate theory, is sought by Freud's psychoanalytic method of
+treating homosexuality. For the psychoanalytic theory (to which reference
+was made in the previous chapter) the congenital element of inversion is a
+rare and usually unimportant factor; the chief part is played by perverse
+psychic mechanisms. It is the business of psychoanalysis <a name='2_Page_331'></a>to straighten
+these out, and from the bisexual constitution, which is regarded as common
+to every one, to bring into the foreground the heterosexual elements, and
+so to reconstruct a normal personality, developing new sexual ideals from
+the patient's own latent and subconscious nature. Sadger has especially
+occupied himself with the psychoanalytic treatment of homosexuality and
+claims many successes.<a name='2_FNanchor_253'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_253'><sup>[253]</sup></a> Sadger admits that there are many limits to
+the success of this treatment, and that it cannot affect the inborn
+factors of homosexuality when present. Other psychoanalysts are less
+sanguine as to the cure of inversion. Stekel appears to have stated that
+he has never seen a complete cure by psychoanalysis, and Ferenezi is not
+able to give a good account of the results; especially as regards what he
+terms obsessional homosexuality, he states that he has never succeeded in
+effecting a complete cure, although obsessions in general are especially
+amenable to psychoanalysis.<a name='2_FNanchor_254'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_254'><sup>[254]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>I have met with at least two homosexual persons who had undergone
+psychoanalytic treatment and found it beneficial. One, however, was
+bisexual, so that the difficulties in the way of the success&mdash;granting it
+to be real&mdash;were not serious. In the other case, the inversion persisted
+after treatment, exactly the same as before. The benefit he received was
+due to the fact that he was enabled to understand himself better and to
+overcome some of his mental difficulties. The treatment, therefore, in his
+case, was not a method of cure, but of psychic hygiene, of what Hirschfeld
+would call &quot;adaptation-therapy.&quot; There can be no doubt that&mdash;even if we
+put aside all effort at cure and regard an invert's condition as inborn
+and permanent&mdash;a large and important field of treatment here still
+remains.<a name='2_Page_332'></a></p>
+
+<p>As we have seen in the two previous chapters, sexual inversion cannot be
+regarded as essentially an insane or psychopathic state.<a name='2_FNanchor_255'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_255'><sup>[255]</sup></a> But it is
+frequently associated with nervous conditions which may be greatly
+benefited by hygiene and treatment, without any attempt at all to overcome
+a homosexual attitude which may be too deeply rooted to be changed. The
+invert is specially liable to suffer from a high degree of neurasthenia,
+often involving much nervous weakness and irritability, loss of
+self-control, and genital hyperesthesia.<a name='2_FNanchor_256'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_256'><sup>[256]</sup></a> Hirschfeld finds that over
+67 per cent. inverts suffer from nervous troubles, and among the cases
+dealt with in the present <i>Study</i> (as shown in chapter v) slight nervous
+functional disturbances are very common. These are conditions which may be
+ameliorated, and they may be treated in much the same way as if no
+inversion existed, by physical and mental tonics; or, if necessary,
+sedatives; by regulated gymnastics and out-of-door exercises; and by
+occupations which employ, without overexerting, the mind. Very great and
+permanent benefit may be obtained by a prolonged course of such mental and
+physical hygiene; the associated neurasthenic conditions may be largely
+removed, with the morbid fears, suspicions, and irritabilities that are
+usually part of neurasthenia, and the invert may be brought into a fairly
+wholesome and tonic condition of self-control.</p>
+
+<p>The inversion is not thus removed. But if the patient is still young, and
+if the perversion does not appear to be deeply rooted in the organism, it
+is probable that&mdash;provided his own <a name='2_Page_333'></a>good-will is aiding&mdash;general hygienic
+measures, together with removal to a favorable environment, may gradually
+lead to the development of the normal sexual impulse. If it fails to do
+so, it becomes necessary to exercise great caution in recommending
+stronger methods. Purely &quot;Platonic association with the other sex,&quot; Moll
+points out, &quot;leads to better results than any prescribed attempt at
+coitus.&quot; For even when such attempt is successful, it is not usually
+possible to regard the results with much satisfaction. Not only is the
+acquisition of the normal instinct by an invert very much on a level with
+the acquisition of a vice, but probably it seldom succeeds in eradicating
+the original inverted instinct.<a name='2_FNanchor_257'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_257'><sup>[257]</sup></a> What usually happens is that the
+person becomes capable of experiencing both impulses,&mdash;not a specially
+satisfactory state of things. It may be disastrous, especially if it leads
+to marriage, as it may do in an inverted man or still more easily in an
+inverted woman. The apparent change does not turn out to be deep, and the
+invert's position is more unfortunate than his original position, both for
+himself and for his wife.<a name='2_FNanchor_258'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_258'><sup>[258]</sup></a> <a name='2_Page_334'></a></p>
+
+<p>It may be observed in the Histories brought forward in chapter iii that
+the position of married inverts (we must, of course, put aside the
+bisexual) is usually more distressing than that of the unmarried. Among my
+cases 14 per cent. are married. Hirschfeld finds that 16 per cent. of
+inverts are married and 50 per cent. are impotent; he is unable to find a
+single cure of homosexuality, and seldom any improvement, due to marriage;
+nearly always the impulse remains unaffected. The invert's happiness is,
+however, often affected for the worse, and not least by the feeling that
+he is depriving his wife of happiness. An invert, who had left his country
+through fear of arrest and married a rich woman who was in love with him,
+said to Hirschfeld: &quot;Five years' imprisonment would not have been worse
+than one year of marriage.&quot;<a name='2_FNanchor_259'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_259'><sup>[259]</sup></a> In a marriage of this kind the homosexual
+partner and the normal partner&mdash;however ignorant of sexual matters&mdash;are
+both conscious, often with equal pain, that, even in the presence of
+affection and esteem and the best will in the world, there is something
+lacking. The instinctive and emotional element, which is the essence of
+sexual love and springs from the central core of organic personality,
+cannot voluntarily be created or even assumed.<a name='2_FNanchor_260'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_260'><sup>[260]</sup></a> <a name='2_Page_335'></a></p>
+
+<p>For the sake of the possible offspring, also, marriage is to be avoided.
+It is sometimes entirely for the sake of children that the invert desires
+to marry. But it must be pointed out that homosexuality is undoubtedly in
+many cases inherited. Often, it is true, the children turn out fairly
+well, but, in many cases, they bear witness that they belong to a neurotic
+and failing stock;<a name='2_FNanchor_261'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_261'><sup>[261]</sup></a> Hirschfeld goes so far as to say that it is always
+so, and concludes that from the eugenic standpoint the marriage of a
+homosexual person is always very risky. In a large number of cases such
+marriages prove sterile. The tendency to sexual inversion in eccentric and
+neurotic families seems merely to be nature's merciful method of winding
+up a concern which, from her point of view, has ceased to be profitable.</p>
+
+<div class='blkquot'><p>As a rule, inverts have no desire to be different from what they
+ are, and, if they have any desire for marriage, it is usually
+ only momentary. Very pathetic appeals for help are, however,
+ sometimes made. I may quote from a letter addressed to me by a
+ gentleman who desired advice on this matter: &quot;In part, I write to
+ you as a moralist and, in part, as to a physician. Dr. Q. has
+ published a book in which, without discussion, hypnotic treatment
+ of such cases was reported as successful. I am eager to know if
+ your opinion remains what it was. This new assurance comes from a
+ man whose moral firmness and delicacy are unquestionable, but you
+ will easily imagine how one might shrink from the implantation of
+ new impulses in the unconscious self, since newly created
+ inclinations might disturb the conditions of life. At any rate,
+ <a name='2_Page_336'></a>in my ignorance of hypnotism I fear that the effort to give the
+ normal instinct might lead to marriage without the assurance that
+ the normal instinct would be stable. I write, therefore, to
+ explain my present condition and crave your counsel. It is with
+ the greatest reluctance that I reveal the closely guarded secret
+ of my life. I have no other abnormality, and have not hitherto
+ betrayed my abnormal instinct. I have never made any person the
+ victim of passion: moral and religious feelings were too
+ powerful. I have found my reverence for other souls a perfect
+ safeguard against any approach to impurity. I have never had
+ sexual interest in women. Once I had a great friendship with a
+ beautiful and noble woman, without any mixture of sexual feeling
+ on my part. I was ignorant of my condition, and I have the bitter
+ regret of having caused in her a hopeless love&mdash;proudly and
+ tragically concealed to her death. My friendships with men,
+ younger men, have been colored by passion, against which I have
+ fought continually. The shame of this has made life a hell, and
+ the horror of this abnormality, since I came to know it as such,
+ has been an enemy to my religious faith. Here there could be no
+ case of a divinely given instinct which I was to learn to use in
+ a rational and chaste fashion, under the control of spiritual
+ loyalty. The power which gave me life seemed to insist on my
+ doing that for which the same power would sting me with remorse.
+ If there is no remedy I must either cry out against the injustice
+ of this life of torment between nature and conscience, or submit
+ to the blind trust of baffled ignorance. If there is a remedy
+ life will not seem to be such an intolerable ordeal. I am not
+ pleading that I must succumb to impulse. I do not doubt that a
+ pure celibate life is possible so far as action is concerned. But
+ I cannot discover that friendship with younger men can go on
+ uncolored by a sensuous admixture which fills me with shame and
+ loathing. The gratification of passion&mdash;normal or abnormal&mdash;is
+ repulsive to esthetic feeling. I am nearly 42 and I have always
+ diverted myself from personal interests that threatened to become
+ dangerous to me. More than a year ago, however, a new fate seemed
+ to open to my unhappy and lonely life. I became intimate with a
+ young man of 20, of the rarest beauty of form and character. I am
+ confident that he is and always has been pure. He lives an
+ exalted moral and religious life dominated by the idea that he
+ and all men are partners of the divine nature, and able in the
+ strength of that nature to be free from evil. I believe him to be
+ normal. He shows pleasure in the society of attractive young
+ women and in an innocent, light-hearted way refers to the time
+ when he may be able to marry. He is a general favorite, but
+ turned to me as to a friend and teacher. He is poor, and it was
+ possible for me to guarantee him a good education. I began to
+ help him from the longings of a lonely life.<a name='2_Page_337'></a> I wanted a son and
+ a friend in my inward desolation. I craved the companionship of
+ this pure and happy nature. I felt such a reverence for him that
+ I hoped to find the sensuous element in me purged away by his
+ purity. I am, indeed, utterly incapable of doing him harm; I am
+ not morally weak; nevertheless the sensuous element is there, and
+ it poisons my happiness. He is ardently affectionate and
+ demonstrative. He spends the summers with me in Europe, and the
+ tenderness he feels for me has prompted him at times to embrace
+ and kiss me as he always has done to his father. Of late I have
+ begun to fear that without will or desire I may injure the
+ springs of feeling in him, especially if it is true that the
+ homosexual tendency is latent in most men. The love he shows me
+ is my joy, but a poisoned joy. It is the bread and wine of life
+ to me; but I dare not think what his ardent affection might ripen
+ into. I can go on fighting the battle of good and evil in my
+ attachment to him, but I cannot define my duty to him. To shun
+ him would be cruelty and would belie his trust in human fidelity.
+ Without my friendship he will not take my money&mdash;the condition of
+ a large career. I might, indeed, explain to him what I explain to
+ you, but the ordeal and shame are too great, and I cannot see
+ what good it would do. If he has the capacity of homosexual
+ feeling he might be violently stimulated; if he is incapable of
+ it, he would feel repulsion.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;Suppose, then, that I should seek hypnotic treatment, I still do
+ not know what tricks an abnormal nature might play me when
+ diverted by suggestion. I might lose the joy of this friendship
+ without any compensation. I am afraid; I am afraid! Might I not
+ be influenced to shun the only persons who inspire unselfish
+ feeling?</p>
+
+<p> &quot;Bear with this account of my story. Many virtues are easy for
+ me, and my life is spent in pursuits of culture. Alas, that all
+ the culture with which I am credited, all the prayers and
+ aspirations, all the strong will and heroic resolves have not rid
+ my nature of this evil bent! What I long for is the right to
+ love, not for the mere physical gratification, for the right to
+ take another into the arms of my heart and profess all the
+ tenderness I feel, to find my joy in planning his career with
+ him, as one who is rightfully and naturally entitled to do so. I
+ crave this since I cannot have a son. I leave the matter here.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;When I read what I have written I see how pointless it is. It is
+ possible, indeed, that brooding over my personal calamity
+ magnifies in my mind the sense of danger to this friend through
+ me, and that I only need to find the right relation of
+ friendliness coupled with aloofness which will secure him against
+ any too ardent attachment. Certainly I have no fear that I shall
+ forget myself. Yet two things array themselves <a name='2_Page_338'></a>on the other
+ side: I rebel inwardly against the necessity of isolating myself
+ as if I were a pestilence, and I rebel against the taint of
+ sensuous feeling. The normal man can feel that his instinct is no
+ shame when the spirit is in control. I know that to the
+ consciousness of others my instinct itself would be a shame and a
+ baseness, and I have no tendency to construct a moral system for
+ myself. I have, to be sure, moments when I declare to myself that
+ I will have my sensuous gratification as well as other men, but,
+ the moment I think of the wickedness of it, the rebellion is soon
+ over. The disesteem of self, the sense of taint, the necessity of
+ withdrawing from happiness lest I communicate my taint, that is a
+ spiritual malady which makes the ground-tone of my existence one
+ of pain and melancholy. Should you have only some moral
+ consolation without the promise of medical assistance I should
+ feel grateful.&quot;</p>
+
+<p> In such a case as this, one can do little more than advise the
+ sufferer that, however painful his lot may be, it is not without
+ its consolations, and that he would be best advised to pursue, as
+ cheerfully as may be, the path that he has already long since
+ marked out for himself. The invert sometimes fails to realize
+ that for no man with high moral ideals, however normal he may be,
+ is the conduct of life easy, and that if the invert has to be
+ satisfied with affection without passion, and to live a life of
+ chastity, he is doing no more than thousands of normal men have
+ done, voluntarily and contentedly. As to hypnotism in such a case
+ as this, it is altogether unreasonable to expect that suggestion
+ will supplant the deeply rooted organic impulses that have grown
+ up during a lifetime. </p></div>
+
+<p>We may thus conclude that in the treatment of inversion the most
+satisfactory result is usually obtained when it is possible by direct and
+indirect methods to reduce the sexual hyperesthesia which frequently
+exists, and by psychic methods to refine and spiritualize the inverted
+impulse, so that the invert's natural perversion may not become a cause of
+acquired perversity in others. The invert is not only the victim of his
+own abnormal obsession, he is the victim of social hostility. We must seek
+to distinguish the part in his sufferings due to these two causes. When I
+review the cases I have brought forward and the mental history of inverts
+I have known, I am inclined to say that if we can enable an invert to be
+healthy, selfrestrained and selfrespecting, we have often done better than
+to convert him into the mere feeble simulacrum of a normal man. An appeal
+to <a name='2_Page_339'></a>the <i>paiderastia</i> of the best Greek days, and the dignity, temperance,
+even chastity, which it involved, will sometimes find a ready response in
+the emotional, enthusiastic nature of the congenital invert. Plato's
+Dialogues have frequently been found a source of great help and
+consolation by inverts. The &quot;manly love&quot; celebrated by Walt Whitman in
+<i>Leaves of Grass</i>, although it may be of more doubtful value for general
+use, furnishes a wholesome and robust ideal to the invert who is
+insensitive to normal ideals.<a name='2_FNanchor_262'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_262'><sup>[262]</sup></a></p>
+
+<div class='blkquot'><p>Among recent books, <i>Iol&auml;us: An Anthology of Friendship</i>, edited
+ by Edward Carpenter, may be recommended. A similar book in
+ German, of a more extended character, is <i>Lieblingminne und
+ Freudesliebe in der Weltliteratur</i>, edited by Elis&aacute;r von Kupffer.
+ Mention may also be made of the <i>Freundschaft</i> (1912) of Baron
+ von Gleichen-Russwurm, a sort of literary history of friendship,
+ without specific reference to homosexuality, although many
+ writers of inverted tendency are introduced. Platen's
+ <i>Tageb&uuml;cher</i> are notable as the diary of an invert of high
+ character and ideals. The volumes of the <i>Jahrbuch f&uuml;r sexuelle
+ Zwischenstufen</i> contain many studies bearing on the ideal and
+ esthetic aspects of homosexuality.</p>
+
+<p> Various modern poets of high ability have given expression to
+ emotions of exalted or passionate friendship toward individuals
+ of the same sex, whether or not such friendship can properly be
+ termed homosexual. It is scarcely necessary to refer to <i>In
+ Memoriam</i>, in which Tennyson enshrined his affection for his
+ early friend, Arthur Hallam, and developed a picture of the
+ universe on the basis of that affection. The poems of Edward
+ Cracroft Lefroy are notable, and Mr. John Gambril Nicholson has
+ privately issued several volumes of verse (<i>A Chaplet of
+ Southernwood, A Garland of Ladslove</i>, etc.) showing delicate
+ charm combined with high technical skill. Some books mainly <a name='2_Page_340'></a>or
+ entirely written in prose may fairly be included in the same
+ group. Such are <i>In the Key of Blue</i>, by John Addington Symonds,
+ and the <i>Memoirs of Arthur Hamilton</i> (published anonymously by a
+ well-known author, A. C. Benson), in which on somewhat Platonic
+ lines the idea is worked out that the individual sufferer must
+ pass &quot;from the love of one fair form to the love of abstract
+ beauty&quot; and &quot;from the contemplation of his own suffering to the
+ consideration of the root of all human suffering.&quot;</p>
+
+<p> As regards the modern poetic literature of feminine homosexuality
+ there is probably nothing to put beside the various
+ volumes&mdash;pathetic in their brave simplicity and sincerity&mdash;of
+ &quot;Ren&eacute;e Vivien&quot; (see <i>ante</i>, p. 200). Most other feminine singers
+ of homosexuality have cautiously thrown a veil of heterosexuality
+ over their songs.</p>
+
+<p> Novels of a more or less definitely homosexual tone are now very
+ numerous in English, French, German, and other languages. In
+ English the homosexuality is for the most part veiled and the
+ narrative deals largely with school-life and boys in order that
+ the emotional and romantic character of the relations described
+ may appear more natural. Thus <i>Tim</i>, an anonymously published
+ book by H. O. Sturgis (1891), described the devotion of a boy to
+ an older boy at Eton and his death at an early age. <i>Jaspar
+ Tristram</i>, by A. W. Clarke (1899), again, is a well-written story
+ of a schoolboy friendship of homosexual tone; a boy is
+ represented as feeling attraction to boys who are like girls, and
+ a girl became attractive to the hero because she is like a boy
+ and recalls her brother whom he had formerly loved. <i>The Garden
+ God: A Tale of Two Boys</i>, by Forrest Reid (1905), is another
+ rather similar book, in its way a charming and delicately written
+ idyll. <i>Imre: A Memorandum</i>, (1906), by &quot;Xavier Mayne&quot; (the
+ pseudonym of an American author, who has also written <i>The
+ Intersexes</i>), privately issued at Naples, is a book of a
+ different class; representing the frankly homosexual passion of
+ two mutually attracted men, an Englishman who is supposed to
+ write the story and a Hungarian officer; it embodies a notable
+ narrative of homosexual development which is probably more or
+ less real.</p>
+
+<p> In French there are a number of novels dealing with
+ homosexuality, sometimes sympathetically, sometimes with artistic
+ indifference, sometimes satirically. Andr&eacute; Gide (in
+ <i>L'Immoraliste</i> and other books), Rachilde (Madame Vallette),
+ Willy (in the well-known <i>Claudine</i> series) may be mentioned,
+ among other writers of more or less distinction, who have once or
+ oftener dealt with homosexuality. Special reference should be
+ made to the Belgian author George Eekhoud, whose <i>Escal-Vigor</i>
+ (prosecuted at Bruges on its publication) is a book of special
+ power. The homosexual stories of Essebac, of <a name='2_Page_341'></a>which <i>L'Elu</i>
+ (1902) is considered the best, are of a romantic and sentimental
+ character. <i>Lucien</i> (1910), by Binet-Valmer, is a penetrating and
+ scarcely sympathetic study of inversion. Nortal's <i>Les
+ Adolescents Passionn&eacute;s</i> (already mentioned, p. 325) is a notably
+ intimate and precise study of homosexuality in French schools. It
+ would be easy to mention many others.</p>
+
+<p> In Germany during recent years many novels of homosexual
+ character have been published. They are not usually, it would
+ seem, of high literary character, but are sometimes notable as
+ being more or less disguised narratives of real fact. Body's <i>Aus
+ Eines Mannes M&auml;dchenjahren</i> is said to be a faithful
+ autobiography. <i>Der Neue Werther: eine Hellenische
+ Passions-geschichte</i> by Narkissos (1902) is also said to be
+ authentic. Another book that may be mentioned is Konradin's <i>Ein
+ Junger Platos: Aus dem Leben eines Entgbeistes</i> (1914). The
+ German belletristic literature of homosexuality, as well as that
+ of other countries, will be found adequately summarized and
+ criticised by Numa Praetorius in the volumes of the <i>Jahrbuch f&uuml;r
+ sexuelle Zwischenstufen</i>. See also Hirschfeld's <i>Die
+ Homosexualit&auml;t</i>, pp. 47 and 1018 <i>et seq.</i> </p></div>
+
+<p>It is by some such method of self-treatment as this that most of the more
+highly intelligent men and women whose histories I have already briefly
+recorded have at last slowly and instinctively reached a condition of
+relative health and peace, both physical and moral. The method of
+self-restraint and self-culture, without self-repression, seems to be the
+most rational method of dealing with sexual inversion when that condition
+is really organic and deeply rooted. It is better that a man should be
+enabled to make the best of his own strong natural instincts, with all
+their disadvantages, than that he should be unsexed and perverted, crushed
+into a position which he has no natural aptitude to occupy. As both
+Raffalovich and F&eacute;r&eacute; have insisted, it is the ideal of chastity, rather
+than of normal sexuality, which the congenital invert should hold before
+his eyes. He may not have in him the making of <i>l'homme moyen sensuel</i>; he
+may have in him the making of a saint.<a name='2_FNanchor_263'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_263'><sup>[263]</sup></a> What good work in <a name='2_Page_342'></a>the world
+the inverted may do is shown by the historical examples of distinguished
+inverts; and, while it is certainly true that these considerations apply
+chiefly to the finer-grained natures, the histories I have brought
+together suffice to show that such natures constitute a considerable
+proportion of inverts. The helplessly gross sexual appetite cannot thus be
+influenced; but that remains true whether the appetite is homosexual or
+heterosexual, and nothing is gained by enabling it to feed on women as
+well as on men.</p>
+
+<p>A strictly ascetic life, it needs scarcely be said, is with difficulty
+possible for all persons, either homosexual or heterosexual. It is,
+however, outside the province of the physician to recommend his inverted
+patients to live according to their homosexual impulses, even when those
+impulses seem to be natural to the person displaying them. The most that
+the physician is entitled to do, it seems to me, is to present the
+situation clearly, and leave to the patient a decision for which he must
+himself accept the responsibility. Forel goes so far as to say that he
+sees no reason why inverts should not build cities of their own and marry
+each other if they so please, since they can do no harm to normal adults,
+while children can be protected from them.<a name='2_FNanchor_264'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_264'><sup>[264]</sup></a> Such notions are, however,
+too far removed from our existing social conventions to be worth serious
+consideration.</p>
+
+<div class='blkquot'><p>The standpoint here taken up, it may be remarked, by no means
+ denies to the invert a right to the fulfillment of his impulses.
+ Numa Praetorius remarks, it would seem justly, that while the
+ invert must properly be warned against unnatural sexual license,
+ and while those who are capable of continence do well to preserve
+ it, to deny all right to sexual activity to the invert merely
+ causes those inverts who are incapable of self-control to throw
+ recklessly aside all restraints (<i>Zeitschrift f&uuml;r sexuelle
+ Zwischenstufen</i>, vol. viii, 1906, p. 726). The invert has the
+ right to sexual indulgence, it may be, but he has also the duty
+ to accept the full responsibility for his own actions, and the
+ <a name='2_Page_343'></a>necessity to recognize the present attitude of the society he
+ lives in. He cannot be advised to set himself in violent
+ opposition to that society.</p>
+
+<p> The world will not be a tolerable place for pronounced inverts
+ until they are better understood, and that will involve a radical
+ change in general and even medical opinion. An inverted
+ physician, of high character and successful in his profession,
+ writes to me on this point: &quot;The first, and easiest, thing to do,
+ it seems to me, is to convince the medical profession that we
+ unfortunate people are not only as sane, but as moral, as our
+ normal brothers; and that we are even more alive to the supreme
+ necessity of self-control (necessary from every point of view)
+ than they. It is not license we want, but justice; it is the
+ cruelty and prejudice of convention which we wish to abolish&mdash;not
+ the proper and just indignation of society with crimes against
+ the social order. We want to make it possible for us to satisfy
+ our inborn instincts (which are not concerned essentially with
+ sexual acts, so called, alone) without thereby becoming
+ criminals. One of us who would, under any circumstances, seduce a
+ person of his own sex of immature age, and particularly one whose
+ sexual complexion was unknown, deserves the severe punishment
+ which would be meted out to a normal person who did the same to a
+ young girl&mdash;<i>but no more</i>; while, so long as no public offense is
+ given, there should be <i>no penalty or obloquy whatever</i> attached
+ to sexual acts committed with full consent between mature
+ persons. These acts may or may not be wrong and immoral, just as
+ sexual acts between mature persons of different sexes may or may
+ not be wrong or immoral. But in neither case has the law any
+ concern; and public opinion should make no distinction between
+ the two. It is in the highest degree important that it should be
+ clearly understood that we want no relaxation of moral
+ obligations. At present we suffer an inconceivably cruel wrong.&quot; </p></div>
+
+<p>We have always to remember, and there is, indeed, no possibility of
+forgetting, that the question of homosexuality is a social question.
+Within certain limits, the gratification of the normal sexual impulse,
+even outside marriage, arouses no general or profound indignation; and is
+regarded as a private matter; rightly or wrongly, the gratification of the
+homosexual impulse is regarded as a public matter. This attitude is more
+or less exactly reflected in the law. Thus it happens that whenever a man
+is openly detected in a homosexual act, however exemplary his life may
+previously have been, however admirable it may still be in all other
+relations, every ordinary normal citizen, <a name='2_Page_344'></a>however licentious and
+pleasure-loving his own life may be, feels it a moral duty to regard the
+offender as hopelessly damned and to help in hounding him out of society.
+At very brief intervals cases occur, and without reaching the newspapers
+are more or less widely known, in which distinguished men in various
+fields, not seldom clergymen, suddenly disappear from the country or
+commit suicide in consequence of some such exposure or the threat of it.
+It is probable that many obscure tragedies could find their explanation in
+a homosexual cause.</p>
+
+<div class='blkquot'><p>Some of the various tragic ways in which homosexual passions are
+ revealed to society may be illustrated by the following
+ communication from a correspondent, not himself inverted, who
+ here narrates cases that came under his observation in various
+ parts of the United States. The cases referred to will be known
+ to many, but I have disguised the names of persons and places:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p> &quot;At the age of 14 I was a chorister at &mdash;&mdash; church, whose
+ choirmaster, an Englishman named M. W. M., was an accomplished man,
+ seemingly a perfect gentleman, and a devout churchman. He never
+ seemed to care for the society of ladies, never mingled much with
+ the men, but sought companionship with the choristers of my age.
+ He frequently visited at the homes of his favorites, to tea, and
+ when he asked the parents' consent for George's or Frank's
+ company on an excursion or to the theater, and then to spend the
+ night with him, such request was invariably granted. I shall ever
+ remember my first night with him; he began by fondling and
+ caressing me, quieting my alarm by assurances of not hurting me,
+ and after invoking me to secrecy and with promises of many future
+ pleasures, I consented to his desire or passion, which he seemed
+ to satisfy by an attempt at <i>fellatio</i>. Was this depravity? I
+ would say 'No!' after reading his subsequent confession, found in
+ his room after his death by suicide. This was brought about by
+ his too intimate relations with the rector's son who contracted
+ St. Vitus's dance and in the delirium of a fever that followed
+ from nervous exhaustion told of him and his doings. A thorough
+ investigation took place and M. fled, a broken-hearted and
+ disgraced man, who, as the result of remorse, relentless
+ persecution, and exposure through several years, ended his life
+ by drowning himself. In his confession he spoke of having been
+ raised under a very strong moral restraint and having lived an
+ exemplary life, with the exception of this strange desire that
+ his will-power could not control.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;The next case is that of C. H. He came of an old family of brainy
+ men who have, and do yet, occupy prominent places in the pulpit
+ and <a name='2_Page_345'></a>the bar, and was himself a gifted young attorney. I knew him
+ intimately, as for six years he was a close neighbor and we were
+ associated in lodge-work. He was an effeminate little fellow:
+ height, 5 feet 2 inches; weight, 105 pounds; very near-sighted;
+ and he had a light voice, not a treble or falsetto, but still a
+ voice that detracted materially from the beautiful rhetoric that
+ flowed from his lips. He had served his country as its
+ representative in the Legislature and had received the nomination
+ for senator, over a hard-fought political battle. The last
+ canvass and speeches were made at a town which was, in
+ consequence, crowded. That night H. had to occupy a room with a
+ stranger, named E., a travelling salesman. There were two beds in
+ this room. Mr. E., on the following day told several people that
+ during the night he was awakened by H., who had come over to his
+ bed and had his mouth on his 'person,' and that he had threatened
+ to kick him out of the room, but that H. pleaded with him and
+ fell on his knees and swore that he had been overcome by a
+ passion that he had heretofore controlled, and begged of him not
+ to expose him. These facts coming to the notice of his opponents,
+ within twenty-four hours, they hastened to take advantage of it
+ by placarding H. as a second Oscar Wilde, and stating the facts
+ as far as decency and the law allowed. H.'s friends came to him
+ and gave him one of two alternatives: if guilty, either to kill
+ himself or leave that section forever; if not guilty, to slay his
+ traducer, E. H. affirmed his innocence, and in company with two
+ friends, C. and J., took the train for &mdash;&mdash;. Learning there that
+ E. was at a town twelve miles east, they hired a fast livery and
+ drove overland. They found E. at the station, awaiting the
+ arrival of a train. H., with a pistol, strode forward and in his
+ excitement said: 'You exposed me, did you?' Being near-sighted,
+ his aim proved wide of the mark. E. sprang forward and grappled
+ with H. for possession of the pistol, and was fired upon by C.
+ and J., who shot him in the back. He expired in a few minutes,
+ his last statement being to the effect that H. was guilty as
+ accused. H., C., and J. were sentenced to the penitentiary for
+ life. During my six years' acquaintance with H. I knew of nothing
+ derogatory to his character, nor has anyone ever come forward to
+ say that on any other occasion he ever displayed this weakness. I
+ know his early life had a pure atmosphere, as he was an only
+ child and the idol of both his parents, who builded high their
+ hopes of his future success, and who survive this disgrace, but
+ are broken-hearted.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;The next case is that of the Rev. T. W., professor at the
+ University of &mdash;&mdash;. Mr. W. is a scholarly gentleman, affable in
+ his address, eloquent in his oratory, and a fine classical
+ scholar. He was exposed by some of his students, who, to use a
+ slang phrase, accused him of being a 'head-worker.' At his
+ examination by the faculty he confessed his <a name='2_Page_346'></a>weakness, and said
+ he could not control his unholy passion. His resignation was
+ accepted both by the church and the college, and he left.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;I know of a few other cases that have their peculiar traits, and
+ am confident that these persons did not become possessed of this
+ habit through the so-called 'indiscretions of youth,' as in every
+ case their early life was freer from contamination than that of
+ 90 per cent. of the boys who, on reaching man's estate, have,
+ like myself, no desire to deviate from the old-fashioned way
+ formulated by our ancient sire, Adam.&quot; </p></div>
+
+<p>It can scarcely be said that the consciousness of this attitude of society
+is favorable to the invert's attainment of a fairly sane and well-balanced
+state of mind. This is, indeed, one of the great difficulties in his way,
+and often causes him to waver between extremes of melancholia and
+egotistic exaltation. We regard all homosexuality with absolute and
+unmitigated disgust. We have been taught to venerate Alexander the Great,
+Epaminondas, Socrates, and other antique heroes; but they are safely
+buried in the remote past, and do not affect our scorn of homosexuality in
+the present.</p>
+
+<p>It was in the fourth century, at Rome, that the strong modern opposition
+to homosexuality was first clearly formulated in law.<a name='2_FNanchor_265'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_265'><sup>[265]</sup></a> The Roman race
+had long been decaying; sexual perversions of all kinds flourished; the
+population was dwindling. At the same time, Christianity, with its
+Judaic-Pauline antagonism to homosexuality, was rapidly spreading. The
+statesmen of the day, anxious to quicken the failing pulses of national
+life, utilized this powerful Christian feeling. Constantine, Theodosius,
+and Valentinian all passed laws against homosexuality, the last, at all
+events, ordaining as penalty the <i>vindices flamm&aelig;</i>; but their enactments
+do not seem to have been strictly carried out. In the year 538, Justinian,
+professing terror of certain famines, earthquakes, and pestilences in
+which he saw the mysterious &quot;recompense which was meet&quot; prophesied by St.
+Paul,<a name='2_FNanchor_266'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_266'><sup>[266]</sup></a> issued <a name='2_Page_347'></a>his edict condemning unnatural offenders to the sword,
+&quot;lest as the result of these impious acts&quot; (as the preamble to his Novella
+77 has it) &quot;whole cities should perish, together with their inhabitants;
+for we are taught by Holy Scripture that through these acts cities have
+perished with the men in them.&quot;<a name='2_FNanchor_267'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_267'><sup>[267]</sup></a> This edict (which Justinian followed
+up by a fresh ordinance to the same effect) constituted the foundation of
+legal enactment and social opinion concerning the matter in Europe for
+thirteen hundred years.<a name='2_FNanchor_268'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_268'><sup>[268]</sup></a> In France the <i>vindices flamm&aelig;</i> survived to
+the last; St. Louis had handed over these sacrilegious offenders to the
+Church to be burned; in 1750 two pederasts were burned in the Place de
+Gr&egrave;ve, and only a few years before the Revolution a Capuchin monk named
+Pascal was also burned.</p>
+
+<p>After the Revolution, however, began a new movement, which has continued
+slowly and steadily ever since, though it still divides European nations
+into two groups. Justinian, Charlemagne, and St. Louis had insisted on the
+sin and sacrilege of sodomy as the ground for its punishment.<a name='2_FNanchor_269'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_269'><sup>[269]</sup></a> It was
+doubtless largely as a religious offense that the <i>Code Napol&eacute;on</i> omitted
+to punish it. The French law makes a clear and logical distinction between
+crime on the one hand, vice and irreligion on the other, only concerning
+itself with the former. Homosexual practices in private, between two
+consenting adult parties, whether men or women, are absolutely unpunished
+by the <i>Code Napol&eacute;on</i> and by French law of today. Only under three
+conditions does the homosexual act come under the cognizance of <a name='2_Page_348'></a>the law
+as a crime: (1) when there is <i>outrage public &agrave; la pudeur</i>,&mdash;<i>i.e.</i>, when
+the act is performed in public or with a possibility of witnesses; (2)
+when there is violence or absence of consent, in whatever degree the act
+may have been consummated; (3) when one of the parties is under age, or
+unable to give valid consent; in some cases it appears possible to apply
+Article 334 of the penal code, directed against habitual excitation to
+debauch of young persons of either sex under the age of 21.</p>
+
+<p>This method of dealing with unnatural offenses has spread widely, at first
+because of the political influence of France, and more recently because
+such an attitude has commended itself on its merits. In Belgium the law is
+similar to that of the <i>Code Napol&eacute;on</i>, as it is also in Italy, Spain,
+Portugal, Roumania, Japan, and numerous South American lands. In
+Switzerland the law is a little vague and varies slightly in the different
+cantons, but it is not severe; in Geneva and some other cantons there is
+no penalty; the general tendency is to inflict brief imprisonment when
+serious complaints have been lodged, and cases can sometimes be settled
+privately by the magistrate.</p>
+
+<p>The only large European countries in which homosexuality <i>per se</i> remains
+a penal offense appear to be Germany, Austria, Russia, and England. In
+several of the German States, such as Bavaria and Hanover, simple
+homosexuality formerly went unpunished, but when the laws of Prussia were
+in 1871 applied to the new German Empire this ceased to be the case, and
+unnatural carnality between males became an offense against the law. This
+article of the German Code (Section 175) has caused great discussion and
+much practical difficulty, because, although the terms of the law make it
+necessary to understand by <i>widernat&uuml;rliche Unzucht</i> other practices
+besides <i>p&aelig;dicatio</i>, not every homosexual practice is included; it must be
+some practice resembling normal coitus. There is a widespread opinion that
+this article of the code should be abolished; it appears that at one time
+an authoritative committee pronounced in favor of this step, and their
+proposition came near adoption. The Austrian law is somewhat similar to
+the German, but it <a name='2_Page_349'></a>applies to women as well as to men; this is logical,
+for there is no reason why homosexuality should be punished in men and
+left unpunished in women. In Russia the law against homosexual practices
+appears to be very severe, involving, in some cases, banishment to Siberia
+and deprivation of civil rights; but it can scarcely be rigorously
+executed.</p>
+
+<p>The existing law in England is severe, but simple. Carnal knowledge <i>per
+anum</i> of either a man or a woman or an animal is punishable by a sentence
+of penal servitude with not less than three years, or of imprisonment with
+not more than two years. Even &quot;gross indecency&quot; between males, however
+privately committed, has been since 1885 a penal offense.<a name='2_FNanchor_270'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_270'><sup>[270]</sup></a> The clause
+is open to criticism. With the omission of the words &quot;or private,&quot; it
+would be sound and in harmony with the most enlightened European
+legislation; but it must be pointed out that an act only becomes indecent
+when those who perform it or witness it regard it as indecent. The act
+which brought each of us into the world is not indecent; it would become
+so if carried on in public. If two male persons, who have reached years of
+discretion, consent together to perform some act of sexual intimacy in
+private, no indecency has been committed. If one of the consenting parties
+subsequently proclaims the act, indecency may doubtless be created, as may
+happen also in the case of normal sexual intercourse, but it seems
+contrary to good policy that such proclamation should convert the act
+itself into a penal offense. Moreover, &quot;gross indecency&quot; between males
+usually means some form of mutual masturbation; no penal code regards
+masturbation as an offense, and there seems to be no sufficient reason why
+mutual masturbation should be so regarded.<a name='2_FNanchor_271'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_271'><sup>[271]</sup></a> The <a name='2_Page_350'></a>main point to be
+insured is that no boy or girl who has not reached years of discretion
+should be seduced or abused by an older person, and this point is equally
+well guaranteed on the basis introduced by the <i>Code Napol&eacute;on</i>. However
+shameful, disgusting, personally immoral, and indirectly antisocial it may
+be for two adult persons of the same sex, men or women, to consent
+together to perform an act of sexual intimacy in private, there is no
+sound or adequate ground for constituting such act a penal offense by law.</p>
+
+<p>One of the most serious objections to the legal recognition of private
+&quot;gross indecency&quot; is the obvious fact that only in the rarest cases can
+such indecency become known to the police, and we thus perpetrate what is
+very much like a legal farce. &quot;The breaking of few laws,&quot; as Moll truly
+observes, regarding the German law, &quot;so often goes unpunished as of this.&quot;
+It is the same in England, as is amply evidenced by the fact that, of the
+English sexual inverts, whose histories I have obtained, not one, so far
+as I am aware, has ever appeared in a police-court on this charge.</p>
+
+<p>It may further be pointed out that legislation against homosexuality has
+no clear effect either in diminishing or increasing its prevalence. This
+must necessarily be so as regards the kernel of the homosexual group, if
+we are to regard a considerable proportion of cases as congenital. In
+France homosexuality <i>per se</i> has been untouched by the law for a century;
+yet it abounds, chiefly, it seems, among the lowest in the community;
+although the law is silent, social feeling is strong, and when&mdash;as has
+been the case in one instance&mdash;a man of undoubted genius has his name
+associated with this perversion it becomes difficult or impossible for the
+admirers of his work to associate with him personally; very few cases of
+homosexuality have been recorded in France among the more intelligent
+classes; the literature of homosexuality is there little more than the
+literature of male prostitution, as described by police-officials, and as
+carried on largely for the benefit of foreigners. In Germany and Austria,
+where the law against homosexuality is severe, it abounds also, <a name='2_Page_351'></a>perhaps
+to a much greater extent than in France;<a name='2_FNanchor_272'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_272'><sup>[272]</sup></a> it certainly asserts itself
+more vigorously; a far greater number of cases have been recorded than in
+any other country, and the German literature of homosexuality is very
+extensive, often issued in popular form, and sometimes enthusiastically
+eulogistic. In England the law is exceptionally severe; yet, according to
+the evidence of those who have an international acquaintance with these
+matters, homosexuality is fully as prevalent as on the Continent; some
+would say that it is more so. Much the same is true of the United States,
+though there is less to be seen on the surface. It cannot, therefore, be
+said that legislative enactments have very much influence on the
+prevalence of homosexuality. The chief effect seems to be that the attempt
+at suppression arouses the finer minds among sexual inverts to undertake
+the enthusiastic defense of homosexuality, while coarser minds are
+stimulated to cynical bravado.<a name='2_FNanchor_273'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_273'><sup>[273]</sup></a></p>
+
+<div class='blkquot'><p>As regards the prevalence of homosexuality in the United States,
+ I may quote from a well-informed American correspondent:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p> &quot;The great prevalence of sexual inversion in American cities is
+ shown by the wide knowledge of its existence. Ninety-nine normal
+ men out of a hundred have been accosted on the streets by
+ inverts, or have among their acquaintances men whom they know to
+ be sexually inverted. Everyone has seen inverts and knows what
+ they are. The public attitude toward them is generally a negative
+ one&mdash;indifference, amusement, contempt.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;The world of sexual inverts is, indeed, a large one in any
+ American city, and it is a community distinctly organized&mdash;words,
+ customs, traditions of its own; and every city has its numerous
+ meeting-places:<a name='2_Page_352'></a> certain churches where inverts congregate;
+ certain caf&eacute;s well known for the inverted character of their
+ patrons; certain streets where, at night, every fifth man is an
+ invert. The inverts have their own 'clubs,' with nightly
+ meetings. These 'clubs' are, really, dance-halls, attached to
+ <i>saloons</i>, and presided over by the proprietor of the saloon,
+ himself almost invariably an invert, as are all the waiters and
+ musicians. The frequenters of these places are male sexual
+ inverts (usually ranging from 17 to 30 years of age); sightseers
+ find no difficulty in gaining entrance; truly, they are welcomed
+ for the drinks they buy for the company&mdash;and other reasons.
+ Singing and dancing turns by certain favorite performers are the
+ features of these gatherings, with much gossip and drinking at
+ the small tables ranged along the four walls of the room. The
+ habitu&eacute;s of these places are, generally, inverts of the most
+ pronounced type, <i>i.e.</i>, the completely feminine in voice and
+ manners, with the characteristic hip motion in their walk; though
+ I have never seen any approach to feminine dress there, doubtless
+ the desire for it is not wanting and only police regulations
+ relegate it to other occasions and places. You will rightly infer
+ that the police know of these places and endure their existence
+ for a consideration; it is not unusual for the inquiring stranger
+ to be directed there by a policeman.&quot;</p>
+
+<p> The Oscar Wilde trial (see <i>ante</i>, p. 48), with its wide
+ publicity, and the fundamental nature of the questions it
+ suggested, appears to have generally contributed to give
+ definiteness and self-consciousness to the manifestations of
+ homosexuality, and to have aroused inverts to take up a definite
+ attitude. I have been assured in several quarters that this is so
+ and that since that case the manifestations of homosexuality have
+ become more pronounced. One correspondent writes:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p> &quot;Up to the time of the Oscar Wilde trial I had not known what the
+ condition of the law was. The moral question in itself&mdash;its
+ relation to my own life and that of my friends&mdash;I reckoned I had
+ solved; but I now had to ask myself how far I was justified in
+ not only breaking the law, but in being the cause of a like
+ breach in others, and others younger than myself. I have never
+ allowed the <i>dictum</i> of the law to interfere with what I deemed
+ to be a moral development in any youth for whom I am responsible.
+ I cannot say that the trial made me alter my course of life, of
+ the rightness of which I was too convincingly persuaded, but it
+ made me much more careful, and it probably sharpened my sense of
+ responsibility for the young. Reviewing the results of the trial
+ as a whole, it doubtless did incalculable harm, and it
+ intensified our national vice of hypocrisy. But I think it also
+ may have done some good in that it made those who, like myself,
+ have thought and experienced deeply in the matter&mdash;and these must
+ be no small few&mdash;ready <a name='2_Page_353'></a>to strike a blow, when the time comes,
+ for what we deem to be right, honorable, and clean.&quot;</p>
+
+<p> From America a lady writes with reference to the moral position
+ of inverts, though without allusion to the Wilde trial:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p> &quot;Inverts should have the courage and independence to be
+ themselves, and to demand an investigation. If one strives to
+ live honorably, and considers the greatest good to the greatest
+ number, it is not a crime nor a disgrace to be an invert. I do
+ not need the law to defend me, neither do I desire to have any
+ concessions made for me, nor do I ask my friends to sacrifice
+ their ideals for me. I too have ideals which I shall always hold.
+ All that I desire&mdash;and I claim it as my right&mdash;is the freedom to
+ exercise this divine gift of loving, which is not a menace to
+ society nor a disgrace to me. Let it once be understood that the
+ average invert is not a moral degenerate nor a mental degenerate,
+ but simply a man or a woman who is less highly specialized, less
+ completely differentiated, than other men and women, and I
+ believe the prejudice against them will disappear, and if they
+ live uprightly they will surely win the esteem and consideration
+ of all thoughtful people. I know what it means to an invert&mdash;who
+ feels himself set apart from the rest of mankind&mdash;to find one
+ human heart who trusts him and understands him, and I know how
+ almost impossible this is, and will be, until the world is made
+ aware of these facts.&quot; </p></div>
+
+<p>But, while the law has had no more influence in repressing abnormal
+sexuality than, wherever it has tried to do so, it has had in repressing
+the normal sexual instinct, it has served to foster another offense. What
+is called blackmailing in England, <i>chantage</i> in France, and <i>Erpressung</i>
+in Germany&mdash;in other words, the extortion of money by threats of exposing
+some real or fictitious offense&mdash;finds its chief field of activity in
+connection with homosexuality.<a name='2_FNanchor_274'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_274'><sup>[274]</sup></a> No doubt the removal of the penalty
+against simple homosexuality does not abolish blackmailing, as the
+existence of this kind of <i>chantage</i> in France shows, but it renders its
+success less probable.</p>
+
+<p>On all these grounds, and taking into consideration the fact that the
+tendency of modern legislation generally, and the consensus <a name='2_Page_354'></a>of
+authoritative opinion in all countries, are in this direction, it seems
+reasonable to conclude that neither &quot;sodomy&quot; (<i>i.e.</i>, <i>immissio membri in
+anum hominis vel mulieris</i>) nor &quot;gross indecency&quot; ought to be penal
+offenses, except under certain special circumstances. That is to say, that
+if two persons of either or both sexes, having reached years of
+discretion,<a name='2_FNanchor_275'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_275'><sup>[275]</sup></a> privately consent to practise some perverted mode of
+sexual relationship, the law cannot be called upon to interfere. It should
+be the function of the law in this matter to prevent violence, to protect
+the young, and to preserve public order and decency. Whatever laws are
+laid down beyond this must be left to the individuals themselves, to the
+moralists, and to social opinion.</p>
+
+<p>At the same time, and while such a modification in the law seems to be
+reasonable, the change effected would be less considerable than may appear
+at first sight. In a very large proportion, indeed, of cases boys are
+involved. It is instructive to observe that in Legludic's 246 cases
+(including victims and aggressors together) in France, 127, or more than
+half, were between the ages of 10 and 20, and 82, or exactly one-third,
+were between the ages of 10 and 14. A very considerable field of operation
+is thus still left for the law, whatever proportion of cases may meet with
+no other penalty than social opinion.</p>
+
+<p>That, however, social opinion&mdash;law or no law&mdash;will speak with no uncertain
+voice is very evident. Once homosexuality was primarily a question of
+population or of religion. Now we hear little either of its economic
+aspects or of its sacrilegiousness; it is for us primarily a disgusting
+abomination, <i>i.e.</i>, a matter of taste, of esthetics; and, while
+unspeakably ugly to the majority, it is proclaimed as beautiful by a small
+minority. I do not know that we need find fault with this esthetic method
+of judging homosexuality. But it scarcely lends itself to legal purposes.
+To indulge in violent denunciation of the disgusting nature of
+homosexuality, and to measure the sentence by the <a name='2_Page_355'></a>disgust aroused, or to
+regret, as one English judge is reported to have regretted when giving
+sentence, that &quot;gross indecency&quot; is not punishable by death, is to import
+utterly foreign considerations into the matter. The judges who yield to
+this temptation would certainly never allow themselves to be consciously
+influenced on the bench by their political opinions. Yet esthetic opinions
+are quite as foreign to law as political opinions. An act does not become
+criminal because it is disgusting. To eat excrement, as Moll remarks, is
+extremely disgusting, but it is not criminal. The confusion which thus
+exists, even in the legal mind, between the disgusting and the criminal is
+additional evidence of the undesirability of the legal penalty for simple
+homosexuality. At the same time it shows that social opinion is amply
+adequate to deal with the manifestations of inverted sexuality. So much
+for the legal aspects of sexual inversion.</p>
+
+<p>But while there can be no doubt about the amply adequate character of the
+existing social reaction to all manifestations of perverted sexuality, the
+question still remains how far not merely the law, but also the state of
+public opinion, should be modified in the light of such a psychological
+study as we have here undertaken. It is clear that this public opinion,
+molded chiefly or entirely with reference to gross vice, tends to be
+unduly violent in its reaction. What, then, is the reasonable attitude of
+society toward the congenital sexual invert? It seems to lie in the
+avoidance of two extremes. On the one hand, it cannot be expected to
+tolerate the invert who flouts his perversion in its face, and assumes
+that, because he would rather take his pleasure with a soldier or a
+policeman than with their sisters, he is of finer clay than the vulgar
+herd. On the other, it might well refrain from crushing with undiscerning
+ignorance beneath a burden of shame the subject of an abnormality which,
+as we have seen, has not been found incapable of fine uses. Inversion is
+an aberration from the usual course of nature. But the clash of contending
+elements which must often mark the history of such a deviation results now
+and again&mdash;by no means infrequently&mdash;in nobler activities than those
+yielded by the vast majority who are <a name='2_Page_356'></a>born to consume the fruits of the
+earth. It bears, for the most part, its penalty in the structure of its
+own organism. We are bound to protect the helpless members of society
+against the invert. If we go farther, and seek to destroy the invert
+himself before he has sinned against society, we exceed the warrant of
+reason, and in so doing we may, perhaps, destroy also those children of
+the spirit which possess sometimes a greater worth than the children of
+the flesh.</p>
+
+<p>Here we may leave this question of sexual inversion. In dealing with it I
+have sought to avoid that attitude of moral superiority which is so common
+in the literature of this subject, and have refrained from pointing out
+how loathsome this phenomenon is, or how hideous that. Such an attitude is
+as much out of place in scientific investigation as it is in judicial
+investigation, and may well be left to the amateur. The physician who
+feels nothing but disgust at the sight of disease is unlikely to bring
+either succor to his patients or instruction to his pupils.</p>
+
+<p>That the investigation we have here pursued is not only profitable to us
+in succoring the social organism and its members, but also in bringing
+light into the region of sexual psychology, is now, I hope, clear to every
+reader who has followed me to this point. There are a multitude of social
+questions which we cannot face squarely and honestly unless we possess
+such precise knowledge as has been here brought together concerning the
+part played by the homosexual tendency in human life. Moreover, the study
+of this perverted tendency stretches beyond itself;</p>
+
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<span class='i8'>&quot;O'er that art<br /></span>
+<span>Which you say adds to Nature, is an art<br /></span>
+<span>That Nature makes.&quot;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Pathology is but physiology working under new conditions. The stream of
+nature still flows into the bent channel of sexual inversion, and still
+runs according to law. We have not wasted our time in this toilsome
+excursion. With the knowledge here gained we are the better equipped to
+enter upon the study of the wider questions of sex.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_243'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_243'>[243]</a> In this connection I may refer to Moll's <i>Sexual Life of
+the Child</i>, to the writings of Dr. Clement Dukes, physician to Rugby
+School, who fully recognizes the risks of school-life, and to the
+discussion on sexual vice in schools, started by an address by the Rev.
+J. M. Wilson, head-master of Clifton College, in the English <i>Journal of
+Education</i>, 1881-82.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_244'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_244'>[244]</a> With regard to the importance of the sexual emotions
+generally and their training, see the well-known book by Edward Carpenter,
+<i>Love's Coming of Age</i>; Professor Gurlitt (&quot;Knabenfreundschaften,&quot;
+<i>Sexual-Probleme</i>, Oct., 1909) also upholds the intimate friendships of
+youth, which in his own experience have not had even a suspicion of
+homosexuality.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_245'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_245'>[245]</a> Casanova, <i>M&eacute;moires</i>, vol. i (edition Garnier), p. 160. See
+also remarks by an experienced master in one of the largest English public
+schools, which I have brought forward in vol. i of these <i>Studies</i>,
+&quot;Auto-erotism,&quot; 3d ed., 1910.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_246'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_246'>[246]</a> See, <i>e.g.</i>, Professor J. R. Angell, &quot;Some Reflections upon
+the Reaction from Coeducation,&quot; <i>Popular Science Monthly</i>, Nov., 1902;
+also Moll's <i>Sexual Life of the Child</i>, ch. ix, and for a general
+discussion of coeducation, S. Poirson, <i>La Co&eacute;ducation</i>, 1911.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_247'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_247'>[247]</a> Bethe, &quot;Die Dorische Knabenliebe,&quot; <i>Rheinisches Museum f&uuml;r
+Philologie</i>; vol. lxii, Heft 3, p. 440; <i>cf.</i> Edward Carpenter,
+<i>Intermediate Types among Primitive Folk</i>, ch. vi.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_248'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_248'>[248]</a> Schrenck-Notzing, <i>Die Suggestionstherapie bei krankhaften
+Erscheinungen des Geschlechtsinnes</i>, 1892. (Eng. trans. <i>Therapeutic
+Suggestion</i>, 1895.)</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_249'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_249'>[249]</a> Raffalovich, <i>Uranisme et Unisexualit&eacute;</i>, 1896, p. 16. He
+remarks that the congenital invert who has never had relations with women,
+and whose abnormality, to use Krafft-Ebing's distinction, is a perversion
+and not a perversity, is much less dangerous and apt to seduce others than
+the more versatile and corrupt person who has known all methods of
+gratification.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_250'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_250'>[250]</a> See, <i>e.g.</i>, Moll, <i>Die Kontr&auml;re Sexualempfindung</i>, ch. xi;
+Forel, <i>Die Sexuelle Frage</i>, ch. xiv; N&auml;cke, &quot;Die Behandlung der
+Homosexualit&auml;t,&quot; <i>Sexual-Probleme</i>, Aug., 1910; Hirschfeld, <i>Die
+Homosexualit&auml;t</i>, ch. xxii.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_251'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_251'>[251]</a> Moll, <i>Zeitschrift f&uuml;r Psychotherapie</i>, 1911, Heft 1;
+<i>id.</i>, <i>Handbuch der Sexualwissenschaften</i>, 1912, p. 662 <i>et seq.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_252'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_252'>[252]</a> This is also the opinion of Numa Praetorius, <i>Jahrbuch f&uuml;r
+sexuelle Zwischenstufen</i>, Jan., 1913, p. 222.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_253'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_253'>[253]</a> See, especially, Sadger, <i>Zeitschrift f&uuml;r
+Sexualwissenschaft</i>, Heft 12, 1908; also <i>Jahrbuch f&uuml;r sexuelle
+Zwischenstufen</i>, vol. ix, 1908; Sadger's methods are criticised by
+Hirschfeld, <i>Die Homosexualit&auml;t</i>, ch. xxii, and defended by Sadger,
+<i>Internationale Zeitschrift f&uuml;r Aerztliche Psychoanalyse</i>, July, 1914, p.
+392. For a discussion of the psychoanalytic treatment of homosexuality by
+a leading American Freudian, see Brill, <i>Journal American Medical
+Association</i>, Aug. 2, 1913.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_254'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_254'>[254]</a> <i>Internationale Zeitschrift f&uuml;r Aerztliche Psychoanalyse</i>,
+March, 1914.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_255'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_255'>[255]</a> This is now generally recognized. See, <i>e.g.</i>, Roubinovitch
+and Borel, &quot;Un Cas d'Uranisme,&quot; <i>L'Enc&eacute;phale</i>, Aug., 1913. These authors
+conclude that it is today impossible to look upon inversion as the
+equivalent or the symptom of a psychopathic state, though we have to
+recognize that it frequently coexists with morbid emotional states. N&auml;cke,
+also, in his extensive experience, found that homosexuality is rare in
+asylums and slight in character; he dealt with this question on various
+occasions; see, <i>e.g.</i>, <i>Jahrbuch f&uuml;r sexuelle Zwischenstufen</i>, vol. viii,
+1906.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_256'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_256'>[256]</a> Krafft-Ebing considered that the temporary or lasting
+association of homosexuality with neurasthenia having its root in
+congenital conditions is &quot;almost invariable,&quot; and some authorities (like
+Meynert) have regarded inversion as an accidental growth on the foundation
+of neurasthenia.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_257'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_257'>[257]</a> F&eacute;r&eacute; expressed himself concerning the general treatment of
+homosexuality in the same sense, and even more emphatically (F&eacute;r&eacute;,
+<i>L'Instinct Sexuel</i>, 1899, pp. 272, 286). He considers that all forms of
+congenital inversion resist treatment, and that, since a change in the
+invert's instincts must be regarded rather as a perversion of the invert
+than a cure of the inversion, one may be permitted to doubt not only the
+utility of the treatment, but even the legitimacy of attempting it. The
+treatment of sexual inversion, he declared, is as much outside the
+province of medicine as the restoration of color-vision in the
+color-blind. The ideal which the physician and the teacher must place
+before the invert is that of chastity; he must seek to harness his wagon
+to a star.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_258'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_258'>[258]</a> I have been told by a distinguished physician, who was
+consulted in the case, of a congenital invert highly placed in the English
+government service, who married in the hope of escaping his perversion,
+and was not even able to consummate the marriage. It is needless to insist
+on the misery which is created in such cases. It is not, of course, denied
+that such marriages may not sometimes become eventually happy. Thus
+Kiernan (&quot;Psychical Treatment of Congenital Sexual Inversion,&quot; <i>Review of
+Insanity and Nervous Diseases</i>, June, 1894) reports the case of a
+thoroughly inverted girl who married the brother of the friend to whom she
+was previously attached merely in order to secure his sister's
+companionship. She was able to endure and even enjoy intercourse by
+imagining that her husband, who resembled his sister, was another sister.
+Liking and esteem for the husband gradually increased and after the sister
+died a child was born who much resembled her; &quot;the wife's esteem passed
+through love of the sister to intense natural love of the daughter, as
+resembling the sister; through this to normal love of the husband as the
+father and brother.&quot; The final result may have been satisfactory, but this
+train of circumstances could not have been calculated beforehand. Moll is
+also opposed, on the whole (<i>e.g.</i>, <i>Deutsche medicinische Presse</i>, No. 6,
+1902), to marriage and procreation by inverts.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_259'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_259'>[259]</a> Hirschfeld, <i>Die Homosexualit&auml;t</i>, ch. xxi. It might seem on
+theoretical grounds that the marriage of a homosexual man with a
+homosexual woman might turn out well. Hirschfeld, however, states that he
+knows of 14 such marriages, and the theoretical expectation has not been
+justified; 3 of the cases speedily terminated in divorce, 4 of the couples
+lived separately, and all but 2 of the remaining couples regretted the
+step they had taken. I may add that in such a case even the expectation of
+happiness scarcely seems reasonable, since neither of the parties can feel
+a true mating impulse toward the other.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_260'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_260'>[260]</a> Hirschfeld also notes (<i>Die Homosexualit&auml;t</i>, p. 95) that
+women often instinctively feel that there is something wrong in the love
+of their inverted husbands who may perhaps succeed in copulating, but
+betray their deepest feelings by a repugnance to touch the sexual parts
+with the hand. The homosexual woman, also, as Hirschfeld elsewhere points
+out with cases in illustration (p. 84), may suffer seriously through being
+subjected to normal sexual relationships.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_261'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_261'>[261]</a> F&eacute;r&eacute; reports the case of an invert of great intellectual
+ability who had never had any sexual relationships, and was not averse
+from a chaste life; he was urged by his doctor to acquire the power of
+normal intercourse and to marry, on the ground that his perversion was
+merely a perversion of the imagination. He did so, and, though he married
+a perfectly strong and healthy woman, and was himself healthy, except in
+so far as his perversion was concerned, the offspring turned out
+disastrously. The eldest child was an epileptic, almost an imbecile, and
+with strongly marked homosexual impulses; the second and third children
+were absolute idiots; the youngest died of convulsions in infancy (F&eacute;r&eacute;,
+<i>L'Instinct Sexuel</i>, p. 269 <i>et seq.</i>) No doubt this is not an average
+case, but the numerous examples of the offspring of similar marriages
+brought forward by Hirschfeld (<i>op. cit.</i>, p. 391) scarcely present a much
+better result.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_262'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_262'>[262]</a> It is scarcely necessary to add that the same principle is
+adaptable to the case of homosexual women. &quot;In all such cases,&quot; writes an
+American woman physician, &quot;I would recommend that the moral sense be
+trained and fostered, and the persons allowed to keep their individuality,
+being taught to remember always that they are different from others,
+rather sacrificing their own feelings or happiness when necessary. It is
+good discipline for them, and will serve in the long run to bring them
+more favor and affection than any other course. This quality or
+idiosyncrasy is not essentially evil, but, if rightly used, may prove a
+blessing to others and a power for good in the life of the individual; nor
+does it reflect any discredit upon its possessor.&quot;</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_263'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_263'>[263]</a> The existence of an affinity between homosexuality and the
+religious temperament has been referred to in ch. i as recognized in many
+parts of the world. See, for a more extended discussion, Horneffer, <i>Der
+Priester</i>, and Bloch, <i>Die Prostitution</i>, vol. i, pp. 101-110. The
+psychoanalysts have also touched on this point; thus Pfister, <i>Die
+Frommingkeit des Grafen von Zinzendorf</i> (1910), argues that the founder of
+the pietistic sect of the Herrenhuter was of sublimated homosexual (or
+bisexual) temperament.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_264'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_264'>[264]</a> Forel, <i>Die Sexuelle Frage</i>, p. 528. Such ideas are, of
+course, often put forward by inverts themselves.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_265'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_265'>[265]</a> Roman law previously seems to have been confined in this
+matter to the protection of boys. The Scantinian and other Roman laws
+against paiderasty seem to have been usually a dead letter. See, for
+various notes and references, W. G. Holmes, <i>The Age of Justinian and
+Theodora</i>, vol. i, p. 121.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_266'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_266'>[266]</a> Epistle to the Romans, chapter i, verses 26-7.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_267'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_267'>[267]</a> In practice this penalty of death appears to have been
+sometimes commuted to ablation of the sexual organs.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_268'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_268'>[268]</a> For a full sketch of the legal enactments against
+homosexual intercourse in ancient and modern times, see Numa Praetorius,
+&quot;Die straflichen Bestimmungen gegen den gleichgeschlechtlichen Verkehr,&quot;
+<i>Jahrbuch f&uuml;r sexuelle Zwischenstufen</i>, vol. i, pp. 97-158. This writer
+points out that Justinian, and still more clearly, Pius V, in the
+sixteenth century, distinguished between occasional homosexuality and
+deep-rooted inversion, habitual offenders alone, not those who had only
+been guilty once or twice, being punished.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_269'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_269'>[269]</a> The influence of the supposed connection of sodomy with
+unbelief, idolatry, and heresy in arousing the horror of it among earlier
+religions has been emphasized by Westermarck, <i>The Origin and Development
+of the Moral Ideas</i>, vol. i, p. 486 <i>et seq.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_270'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_270'>[270]</a> &quot;Any male person who in public or private commits, or is a
+party to the commission of, or procures or attempts to procure the
+commission by any male person of, any act of gross indecency with another
+male person, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, and, being convicted
+thereof, shall be liable at the discretion of the court to be imprisoned
+for any term not exceeding two years, with or without hard labor.&quot;</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_271'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_271'>[271]</a> This point is brought forward by Dr. L&eacute;on de Rode in his
+report on &quot;L'Inversion G&eacute;nitale et la L&eacute;gislation,&quot; prepared for the Third
+(Brussels) Congress of Criminal Anthropology in 1892. The same point is
+insisted on by some of my correspondents.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_272'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_272'>[272]</a> It is a remarkable and perhaps significant fact that, while
+homosexuality is today in absolute disrepute in France, it was not so
+under the less tolerant law of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.
+The Duc de Gesvres, as described by Besenval (<i>M&eacute;moires</i>, i, p. 178), was
+a well-marked invert of feminine type, impotent, and publicly affecting
+all the manners of women; yet he was treated with consideration. In 1687
+Madame, the mother of the Regent, writes implying that &quot;all the young men
+and many of the old&quot; practised pederasty: <i>il n'y a que les gens du commun
+qui aiment les femmes</i>. The marked tendency to inversion in the French
+royal family at this time is well known.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_273'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_273'>[273]</a> A man with homosexual habits, I have been told, declared he
+would be sorry to see the English law changed, as then he would find no
+pleasure in his practices.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_274'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_274'>[274]</a> Blackmailing appears to be the most serious risk which the
+invert runs. Hirschfeld states in an interesting study of blackmailing
+(<i>Jahrbuch f&uuml;r sexuelle Zwischenstufen</i>, April, 1913) that his experience
+shows that among 10,000 homosexual persons hardly one falls a victim to
+the law, but over 3000 are victimized by blackmailers.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_275'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_275'>[275]</a> Krafft-Ebing would place this age not under 16, the age at
+which in England girls may legally consent to normal sexual intercourse
+(<i>Psychopathia Sexualis</i>, 1893, p. 419). It certainly should not be
+lower.</p></div>
+
+
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<h2><a name='2_APPENDIX_A'></a><a name='2_Page_357'></a>APPENDICES.</h2>
+
+<h3><a name='2_Page_358'></a>
+<a name='2_Page_359'></a>APPENDIX A.</h3>
+
+<h4>HOMOSEXUALITY AMONG TRAMPS.</h4>
+
+<h5>BY &quot;JOSIAH FLYNT.&quot;</h5>
+
+<p>I have made a rather minute study of the tramp class in the United States,
+England, and Germany, but I know it best in the States. I have lived with
+the tramps there for eight consecutive months, besides passing numerous
+shorter periods in their company, and my acquaintance with them is nearly
+of ten years' standing. My purpose in going among them has been to learn
+about their life in particular and outcast life in general. This can only
+be done by becoming part and parcel of its manifestations.</p>
+
+<p>There are two kinds of tramps in the United States: out-of-works and
+&quot;hoboes.&quot; The out-of-works are not genuine vagabonds; they really want
+work and have no sympathy with the hoboes. The latter are the real tramps.
+They make a business of begging&mdash;a very good business too&mdash;and keep at it,
+as a rule, to the end of their days. Whisky and <i>Wanderlust</i>, or the love
+of wandering, are probably the main causes of their existence; but many of
+them are discouraged criminals, men who have tried their hand at crime and
+find that they lack criminal wit. They become tramps because they find
+that life &quot;on the road&quot; comes the nearest to the life they hoped to lead.
+They have enough talent to do very well as beggars, better, generally
+speaking, then the men who have reached the road simply as drunkards; they
+know more about the tricks of the trade and are cleverer in thinking out
+schemes and stories. All genuine tramps in America are, however, pretty
+much the same, as far as manners and philosophy are concerned, and all are
+equally <a name='2_Page_360'></a>welcome at the &quot;hang-out.&quot;<a name='2_FNanchor_276'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_276'><sup>[276]</sup></a> The class of society from which
+they are drawn is generally the very lowest of all, but there are some
+hoboes who have come from the very highest, and these latter are
+frequently as vicious and depraved as their less well-born brethren.</p>
+
+<p>Concerning sexual inversion among tramps, there is a great deal to be
+said, and I cannot attempt to tell all I have heard about it, but merely
+to give a general account of the matter. Every hobo in the United States
+knows what &quot;unnatural intercourse&quot; means, talking about it freely, and,
+according to my finding, every tenth man practises it, and defends his
+conduct. Boys are the victims of this passion. The tramps gain possession
+of these boys in various ways. A common method is to stop for awhile in
+some town, and gain acquaintance with the slum children. They tell these
+children all sorts of stories about life &quot;on the road,&quot; how they can ride
+on the railways for nothing, shoot Indians, and be &quot;perfeshunnels&quot;
+(professionals), and they choose some boy who specially pleases them. By
+smiles and flattering caresses they let him know that the stories are
+meant for him alone, and before long, if the boy is a suitable subject, he
+smiles back just as slyly. In time he learns to think that he is the
+favorite of the tramp, who will take him on his travels, and he begins to
+plan secret meetings with the man. The tramp, of course, continues to
+excite his imagination with stories and caresses, and some fine night
+there is one boy less in the town. On the road the lad is called a
+&quot;prushun,&quot; and his protector a &quot;jocker.&quot; The majority of prushuns are
+between 10 and 15 years of age, but I have known some under 10 and a few
+over 15. Each is compelled by hobo law to let his jocker do with him as he
+will, and many, I fear, learn to enjoy his treatment of them. They are
+also expected to beg in every town they come to, any laziness on their
+part receiving very severe punishment.<a name='2_Page_361'></a></p>
+
+<p>How the act of unnatural intercourse takes place is not entirely clear;
+the hoboes are not agreed. From what I have personally observed I should
+say that it is usually what they call &quot;leg-work&quot; (intercrural), but
+sometimes <i>immissio penis in anum</i>, the boy, in either case, lying on his
+stomach. I have heard terrible stories of the physical results to the boy
+of anal intercourse.</p>
+
+<p>One evening, near Cumberland, Pennsylvania, I was an unwilling witness of
+one of the worst scenes that can be imagined. In company with eight
+hoboes, I was in a freight-car attached to a slowly moving train. A
+colored boy succeeded in scrambling into the car, and when the train was
+well under way again he was tripped up and &quot;seduced&quot; (to use the hobo
+euphemism) by each of the tramps. He made almost no resistance, and joked
+and laughed about the business as if he had expected it. This, indeed, I
+find to be the general feeling among the boys when they have been
+thoroughly initiated. At first they do not submit, and are inclined to run
+away or fight, but the men fondle and pet them, and after awhile they do
+not seem to care. Some of them have told me that they get as much pleasure
+out of the affair as the jocker does. Even little fellows under 10 have
+told me this, and I have known them to willfully tempt their jockers to
+intercourse. What the pleasure consists in I cannot say. The youngsters
+themselves describe it as a delightful tickling sensation in the parts
+involved, and this is possibly all that it amounts to among the smallest
+lads. Those who have passed the age of puberty seem to be satisfied in
+pretty much the same way that the men are. Among the men the practice is
+decidedly one of passion. The majority of them prefer a prushun to a
+woman, and nothing is more severely judged than rape. One often reads in
+the newspapers that a woman has been assaulted by a tramp, but the
+perverted tramp is never the guilty party.</p>
+
+<p>I believe, however, that there are a few hoboes who have taken to boys
+because women are so scarce &quot;on the road.&quot; For every woman in hoboland
+there are a hundred men. That this disproportion has something to do with
+the popularity of boys <a name='2_Page_362'></a>is made clear by the following case: In a gaol,
+where I was confined for a month during my life in vagabondage, I got
+acquainted with a tramp who had the reputation of being a &quot;sod&quot;
+(sodomist). One day a woman came to the gaol to see her husband, who was
+awaiting trial. One of the prisoners said he had known her before she was
+married and had lived with her. The tramp was soon to be discharged, and
+he inquired where the woman lived. On learning that she was still
+approachable, he looked her up immediately after his release, and
+succeeded in staying with her for nearly a month. He told me later that he
+enjoyed his life with her much more than his intercourse with boys. I
+asked him why he went with boys at all, and he replied: &quot;'Cause there
+ain't women enough. If I can't get them I've got to have the other.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>It is in gaols that one sees the worst side of this perversion. In the
+daytime the prisoners are let out into a long hall, and can do much as
+they please; at night they are shut up, two and even four in a cell. If
+there are any boys in the crowd, they are made use of by all who care to
+have them. If they refuse to submit, they are gagged and held down. The
+sheriff seldom knows what goes on, and for the boys to say anything to him
+would be suicidal. There is a criminal ignorance all over the States
+concerning the life of these gaols, and things go on that would be
+impossible in any well-regulated prison. In one of these places I once
+witnessed the fiercest fight I have ever seen among hoboes; a boy was the
+cause of it. Two men said they loved him, and he seemed to return the
+affection of both with equal desire. A fight with razors was suggested to
+settle who should have him.<a name='2_FNanchor_277'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_277'><sup>[277]</sup></a> The men prepared for action, while the
+crowd gathered round to watch. They slashed away for over half an hour,
+cutting each other terribly, and then their backers stopped them for fear
+of fatal results. The boy was given to the one who was hurt the least. <a name='2_Page_363'></a></p>
+
+<p>Jealousy is one of the first things one notices in connection with this
+passion. I have known them to withdraw entirely from the &quot;hang-out&quot; life
+simply to be sure that their prushuns were not touched by other tramps.
+Such attachments frequently last for years, and some boys remain with
+their first jockers until they are &quot;emancipated.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Emancipation means freedom to &quot;snare&quot; some other boy, and make him submit
+as the other had been obliged to submit when younger. As a rule, the
+prushun is freed when he is able to protect himself. If he can defend his
+&quot;honor&quot; from all who come, he is accepted into the class of &quot;old stagers,&quot;
+and may do as he likes. This is the one reward held out to prushuns during
+their apprenticeship. They are told that some day they can have a boy and
+use him as they have been used. Thus hoboland is always sure of recruits.</p>
+
+<p>It is difficult to say how many tramps are sexually inverted. It is not
+even certainly known how many vagabonds there are in the country. I have
+stated in one of my papers on tramps that, counting the boys, there are
+between fifty and sixty thousand genuine hoboes in the United States. A
+vagabond in Texas who saw this statement wrote me that he considered my
+estimate too low. The newspapers have criticised it as too high, but they
+are unable to judge. If my figures are, as I believe, at least
+approximately correct, the sexually perverted tramps may be estimated at
+between five and six thousand; this includes men and boys.</p>
+
+<p>I have been told lately by tramps that the boys are less numerous than
+they were a few years ago. They say that it is now a risky business to be
+seen with a boy, and that it is more profitable, as far as begging is
+concerned, to go without them. Whether this means that the passion is less
+fierce than it used to be, or that the men find sexual satisfaction among
+themselves, I cannot say definitely. But from what I know of their
+disinclination to adopt the latter alternative, I am inclined to think
+that the passion may be dying out somewhat. I am sure that women are not
+more numerous &quot;on the road&quot; than formerly, and <a name='2_Page_364'></a>that the change, if real,
+has not been caused by them. So much for my finding in the United States.</p>
+
+<p>In England, where I have also lived with tramps for some time, I have
+found very little contrary sexual feeling. In Germany, also, excepting in
+prisons and work-houses, it seems very little known among vagabonds. There
+are a few Jewish wanderers (sometimes peddlers) who are said to have boys
+in their company, and I am told that they use them as the hoboes in the
+United States use their boys, but I cannot prove this from personal
+observation. In England I have met a number of male tramps who had no
+hesitation in declaring their preference for their own sex, and
+particularly for boys, but I am bound to say that I have seldom seen them
+with boys; as a rule, they were quite alone, and they seem to live chiefly
+by themselves.</p>
+
+<p>It is a noteworthy fact that both in England and Germany there are a great
+many women &quot;on the road,&quot; or, at all events, so near it that intercourse
+with them is easy and cheap. In Germany almost every town has its quarter
+of &quot;Stadt-Schieze&quot;<a name='2_FNanchor_278'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_278'><sup>[278]</sup></a>: women who sell their bodies for a very small sum.
+They seldom ask over thirty or forty pfennigs for a night, which is
+usually spent in the open air. In England it is practically the same
+thing. In all the large cities there are women who are glad to do business
+for three or four pence, and those &quot;on the road&quot; for even less.</p>
+
+<p>The general impression made on me by the sexually perverted men I have met
+in vagabondage is that they are abnormally masculine. In their intercourse
+with boys they always take the active part. The boys have, in some cases,
+seemed to me uncommonly feminine, but not as a rule. In the main, they are
+very much like other lads, and I am unable to say whether their liking for
+the inverted relationship is inborn or acquired. That it is, however, a
+genuine liking, in altogether too many instances, I do not, in the least,
+doubt. As such, and all the more because it is such, it deserves to be
+more thoroughly investigated and more reasonably treated. <a name='2_Page_365'></a></p>
+
+<p>&quot;Josiah Flynt&quot; who wrote the foregoing account of tramp-life for the
+second edition of this volume, was well known as author, sociologist, and
+tramp. He was especially, and it would seem by innate temperament, the
+tramp, which part he looked to perfection (he himself referred to his
+&quot;weasoned face and diminutive form&quot;) and felt completely at home in. He
+was thus able to throw much light on the psychology of the tramp, and his
+books (such as <i>Tramping with Tramps</i>) are valuable from this point of
+view. His real name was F. Willard and he was a nephew of Miss Frances
+Willard. He died in Chicago, in 1907, at the age of 38, shortly after
+writing a frank and remarkable <i>Autobiography</i>. I am able to supplement
+his observations on tramps, so far as England is concerned, by the
+following passages from a detailed record sent to me by an English
+correspondent:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I am a male invert with complete feminine, sexual inclinations. Different
+meetings with 'tramps' led me to seek intimacy with them and for about
+twenty years I have gone on the 'tramp' myself so that I might come in the
+closest contact with them, in England, Scotland, and Wales.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;As in the United States, there are two classes of tramps those who would
+work, such as harvesters, road-makers, etc., and those who will not work,
+but make tramping a profession. Among both these classes my experience is
+that 90 per cent, or I even would be bold enough to say 100 per cent,
+indulge in homosexuality when the opportunity occurs, and I do not make
+any distinction between the two classes.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;There are numerous reasons for this and I will state a few. A certain
+number may prefer normal connection with a female, but except for those
+who tramp in vans and a limited number who have 'donnas' with them, women
+are not available, as prostitutes very seldom allow intimacy for 'love'
+except when drunk. Tramps are also afraid of any venereal disease as it
+means the misery of the Lock Hospital. Most of them are sociable and
+prefer to tramp with a 'make.' With this mate, with whom he sleeps and
+rests and 'boozes' when they are in funds, sexual intimacy naturally takes
+place, as my experience has been that one <a name='2_Page_366'></a>of the two is male and the
+other female in their sexual desires, but I have known instances where
+they have acted both roles. Then male prostitution is to be had for
+nothing, and even occasionally when a tramp meets a 'toff' it is a means
+of earning money, either fairly or otherwise. I have never known a male
+tramp to refuse satisfaction if I offered a drink or two, or a small sum
+of money. One told me that he envied 'no lords or toffs' as long as he got
+plenty of 'booze and buggery.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Another one, who told me that he had been twenty-five years on the road,
+said that he could not endure to sleep alone. (He was a pedlar, openly of
+cheap religious books and secretly of the vilest pamphlets and
+photographs). He had 'done time' and he said the greatest punishment to
+him was not being able to have a 'make' who would submit to penetration,
+though he was not particular what form the sexual act took. Another fine
+young man, whom I chanced to meet the very day he had been released from a
+long sentence in prison for burglary and with whom I passed a night of
+incessant and almost brutal intimacy, said his punishment was seeing men
+always about him and being unable to have connection with them. Another
+and very powerful influence in 'tramps' toward homosexuality is that, in
+the low lodging houses they are obliged to frequent, a single bed is
+perhaps double to one with a bedmate whom perhaps he has never seen
+before, and especially in hot weather, when the rule is nakedness.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;My sexual desires being for the male invert I have come most in contact
+with them and have found that they form much the larger class. Among
+harvesters and seafaring tramps it is seldom you find a 'dandy' such as I
+was considered, and as such I was eagerly courted, and any suggestion of
+intimacy on my part quickly responded to. As regards the use of young boys
+for homosexual indulgence, it is not common as it is too dangerous, though
+I have known boys, especially those belonging to vans or gypsies, to
+prostitute themselves, always for money.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;On one occasion I saw a boy who created quite an outburst of lust of
+homosexual nature. The incident took place <a name='2_Page_367'></a>in a small seafaring town in
+Scotland one evening before a Fair was to be held. It occurred in a low
+public house where a number of very rough and mostly drunken men were
+assembled. A blind man came in led by an extremely pretty but
+effeminate-looking youth of about 17, wearing a ragged kilt and with bare
+legs and feet. He had long, curling, fair hair which reached to his
+shoulders and on it an old bonnet was perched. He also wore an old
+velveteen shooting jacket. All eyes were turned on the pair and they were
+quickly offered drinks. A remark was made by one man that he believed the
+youth was a lassie. The boy said, 'I will show you I am a laddie,' and
+pulled up his kilt, exposing his genitals and then his posterior.
+Boisterous laughter greeted this indecent exposure and suggestion, and
+more drinks were provided. The blind man then played his fiddle and the
+boy danced with frequent recurrences of the same indecencies. He was
+seized, kissed, and caressed by quite a number of men, some of whom
+endeavored to masturbate him, which he resisted, but performed it for
+them. After the closing time came, I and about ten or twelve men all
+occupied the same room; the old man continued to play, and the youth,
+stark naked, continued to dance and suggested we others should do so, and
+an erotic scene took place which was only closed to view by the 'boss' who
+was present putting out the lamp.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Two classes of tramps I have met openly declare their preference for
+homosexuality. They are men who have been in the army and sailors and
+seafaring men in general. It is said that 'Jack has a wife in every port,'
+but I believe from my experience that the wife in many cases is of the
+male sex, and this among those of all nationalities, as is the case with
+soldiers. Among these also jealousy is more common than amongst ordinary
+tramps, and if you are 'dandy' to a soldier, if you make advances or
+receive them from a senior, trouble is likely to occur between them.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I could give many instances of my own personal experiences to show that
+'tramps' are looked upon by men in the country districts as legitimate,
+complacent, and purchaseable objects for homosexual lust.&quot;</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_276'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_276'>[276]</a> This is the home of the fraternity. Practically it is any
+corner where they can lay their heads; but, as a rule, it is either a
+lodging-house, a freight-car, or a nest in the grass near the railway
+watering-tank.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_277'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_277'>[277]</a> All hoboes carry razors, both for shaving and for defense.
+Strange to say, they succeed in smuggling them into gaols, as they are
+never searched thoroughly.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_278'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_278'>[278]</a> This word is of Hebrew origin, and means girl (<i>M&auml;dchen</i>).</p></div>
+
+
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<h3><a name='2_APPENDIX_B'></a><a name='2_Page_368'></a>APPENDIX B.</h3>
+
+<h4>THE SCHOOL-FRIENDSHIPS OF GIRLS.</h4>
+
+<h5>I.</h5>
+
+<p>A school-friendship is termed by Italian girls a &quot;flame&quot; (<i>flamma</i>). This
+term, as explained by Obici and Marchesini, indicates, in school-slang,
+both the beloved person and the friendship in the abstract; but it is a
+friendship which has the note of passion as felt and understood in this
+environment. In every college the &quot;flame&quot; is regarded as a necessary
+institution. The relationship is usually of a markedly Platonic character,
+and generally exists between a boarder on one side and a day-pupil on the
+other. Notwithstanding, however, its apparently non-sexual nature, all the
+sexual manifestations of college youth circle around it, and in its
+varying aspects of differing intensity all the gradations of sexual
+sentiment may be expressed.</p>
+
+<p>Obici and Marchesini carried on their investigation chiefly among the
+pupils of Normal schools, the age of the girls being between 12 and 19 or
+20. There are both boarders and day-pupils at these colleges; the boarders
+are most inflammable, but it is the day-pupils who furnish the sparks.</p>
+
+<p>Obici and Marchesini received much assistance in their studies from former
+pupils who are now themselves teachers. One of these, a day-pupil who had
+never herself been either the object or the agent in one of these
+passions, but had had ample opportunity of making personal observations,
+writes as follows: &quot;The 'flame' proceeds exactly like a love-relationship;
+it often happens that one of the girls shows man-like characteristics,
+either in physical type or in energy and decision of character; the other
+lets herself be loved, acting with all the obstinacy&mdash;and one might almost
+say the shyness&mdash;of a girl with her lover. The beginning of these
+relationships is quite different from the usual beginnings of friendship.
+It is not by being always together, <a name='2_Page_369'></a>talking and studying together, that
+two become 'flames'; no, generally they do not even know each other; one
+sees the other on the stairs, in the garden, in the corridors, and the
+emotion that arises is nearly always called forth by beauty and physical
+grace. Then the one who is first struck begins a regular courtship:
+frequent walks in the garden when the other is likely to be at the window
+of her class-room, pauses on the stairs to see her pass; in short, a mute
+adoration made up of glances and sighs. Later come presents of beautiful
+flowers, and little messages conveyed by complacent companions. Finally,
+if the 'flame' shows signs of appreciating all these proofs of affection,
+comes the letter of declaration. Letters of declaration are long and
+ardent, to such a degree that they equal or surpass real
+love-declarations. The courted one nearly always accepts, sometimes with
+enthusiasm, oftenest with many objections and doubts as to the affection
+declared. It is only after many entreaties that she yields and the
+relationship begins.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Another collaborator who has herself always aroused very numerous &quot;flames&quot;
+gives a very similar description, together with other particulars. Thus
+she states: &quot;It may be said that 60 per cent. of the girls in a college
+have 'flame' relationships, and that of the remaining 40 only half refuse
+from deliberate repulsion to such affections; the other 20 are excluded
+either because they are not sufficiently pleasing in appearance or because
+their characters do not inspire sympathy.&quot; And, regarding the method of
+beginning the relationship, she writes: &quot;Sometimes 'flames' arise before
+the two future friends have even seen each other, merely because one of
+them is considered as beautiful, sympathetic, nice, or elegant. Elegance
+exerts an immense fascination, especially on the boarders, who are bound
+down by monotonous and simple habits. As soon as a boarder hears of a
+day-pupil that she is charming and elegant she begins to feel a lively
+sympathy toward her, rapidly reaching anxiety to see her. The longed-for
+morning at length arrives. The beloved, unconscious of the tumult of
+passions she has aroused, goes into school, not knowing that her walk, her
+movements, her <a name='2_Page_370'></a>garments are being observed from stairs or dormitory
+corridor.... For the boarders these events constitute an important part of
+college-life, and often assume, for some, the aspect of a tragedy, which,
+fortunately, may be gradually resolved into a comedy or a farce.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Many letters are written in the course of these relationships; Obici and
+Marchesini have been able to read over 300 such letters which had been
+carefully preserved by the receivers and which, indeed, formed the chief
+material for their study. These letters clearly show that the &quot;flame&quot; most
+usually arises from a physical sympathy, an admiration of beauty and
+elegance. The letters written in this &quot;flame&quot; relationship are full of
+passion; they appear to be often written during periods of physical
+excitement and psychic erethism, and may be considered, Obici and
+Marchesini remark, a form of intellectual onanism, of which the writers
+afterward feel remorse and shame as of a physically dishonorable act. In
+reference to the underlying connection of these feelings with the sexual
+impulse, one of the lady collaborators writes: &quot;I can say that a girl who
+is in love with a man never experiences 'flame' emotions for a companion.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Obici and Marchesini thus summarize the differential character of &quot;flames&quot;
+as distinguished from ordinary friendships: &quot;(1) the extraordinary
+frequency with which, even by means of subterfuges, the lovers exchange
+letters; (2) the anxiety to see and talk to each other, to press each
+other's hands, to embrace and kiss; (3) the long conversations and the
+very long reveries; (4) persistent jealousy, with its manifold arts and
+usual results; (5) exaltation of the beloved's qualities; (6) the habit of
+writing the beloved's name everywhere; (7) absence of envy for the loved
+one's qualities; (8) the lover's abnegation in conquering all obstacles to
+the manifestations of her love; (9) the vanity with which some respond to
+'flame' declarations; (10) the consciousness of doing a prohibited thing;
+(11) the pleasure of conquest, of which the trophies (letters, etc.) are
+preserved.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The difference between a &quot;flame&quot; and a friendship is very well marked in
+the absolute exclusiveness of the former, whence <a name='2_Page_371'></a>arises the possibility
+of jealousy. At the same time friendship and love are here woven together.
+The letters are chaste (a few exceptions among so many letters not
+affecting this general rule), and the purity of the flame relationship is
+also shown by the fact that it is usually between boarders and day-pupils,
+girls in different classes and different rooms, and seldom between those
+who are living in close proximity to each other. &quot;Certainly,&quot; writes one
+of the lady collaborators, &quot;the first sensual manifestations develop in
+girls with physical excitement pure and simple, but (at all events, I
+would wish to believe it) the majority of college-girls find sufficient
+satisfaction in being as near as possible to the beloved person (of
+whichever sex), in mutual admiration and in kissing, or, very frequently,
+in conversation that is by no means moral, though usually very
+metaphorical. The object of such conversation is to discover the most
+important mysteries of human nature, the why and the wherefore; it deals
+with natural necessities, which the girl feels and has an intuition of,
+but as yet knows nothing definite about. Such conversations are the order
+of the day in schools and in colleges and specially revolve around
+procreation, the most difficult mystery of all. They are a heap of
+stupidities.&quot; This lady had only known of one definitely homosexual
+relationship during the whole of her college-life; the couple in question
+were little liked and had no other &quot;flames.&quot; The chief general sexual
+manifestations, this lady concludes, which she had noted among her
+companions was a constant preoccupation with sexual mysteries and the
+necessity of talking about them perpetually.</p>
+
+<p>Another lady collaborator who had lived in a Normal school had had
+somewhat wider experiences. She entered at the age of 14 and experienced
+the usual loneliness and unhappiness of a new pupil. One day as she was
+standing pensive and alone in a corner of the room, a companion&mdash;one who
+on her arrival had been charged to show her over the college&mdash;ran up to
+her, &quot;embracing me, closing by mouth with a kiss, and softly caressing my
+hair. I gazed at her in astonishment, but experienced a delicious
+sensation of supreme comfort. Here began the idyll!<a name='2_Page_372'></a> I was subjected to a
+furious tempest of kisses and caresses which quite stunned me and made me
+ask myself the reason of such a new and unforeseen affection. I
+ingenuously inquired the reason, and the reply was: 'I love you; you
+struck me immediately I saw you, because you are so beautiful and so
+white, and because it makes me happy and <i>soothes</i> me when I can pass my
+hands through your hair and kiss your plump, white face. I need a soul and
+a body.' This seemed to me the language of a superior person, for I could
+not grasp all its importance. As on the occasion when she first embraced
+me, I looked at her in astonishment and could not for the moment respond
+to a new fury of caresses and kisses. I felt that they were not like the
+kisses of my mamma, my papa, my brother, and other companions; they gave
+me unknown sensations; the contact of those moist and fleshy lips
+disturbed me. Then came the exchange of letters and the usual rights and
+duties of 'flames.' When we met in the presence of others we were only to
+greet each other simply, for 'flames' were strictly prohibited. I obeyed
+because I liked her, but also because I was afraid of her Othello-like
+jealousy. She would suffocate me, even bite me, when I played, joyously
+and thoughtlessly, with others, and woe to me if I failed to call her when
+I was combing my hair. She liked to see me with my hair down and would
+rest her head on my shoulder, especially if I were partially undressed. I
+let her do as she liked, and she would scold me severely because I was
+never first in longing for her, running to meet her, and kissing her. But
+at the same time the thought of losing her, the thought that perhaps one
+day she would shower her caresses on others, secretly wounded my heart.
+But I never told her this! One day, however, when with the head-mistress
+gazing at a beautiful landscape, I was suddenly overwhelmed with sadness
+and burst out crying. The head-mistress inquired what was the matter, and
+throwing myself in her arms I sobbed: 'I love her, and I shall die if she
+leaves off loving me!' She smiled, and the smile went through my heart. I
+saw at once how silly I was, and what a wrong road my companion was on.
+From that day<a name='2_Page_373'></a> I could no longer endure my 'flame.' The separation was
+absolute; I courageously bore bites and insults, even scratches on my
+face, followed by long complaints and complete prostration. I thought it
+would be mean to accuse her, but I invented a pretext for having the
+number of my bed changed. This was because she would dress quietly and
+come to pass hours by my bed, resting her head on the pillow. She said she
+wished to smell the perfume of my health and freshness. This continual
+turbulent desire had now nauseated me, and I wished to avoid it
+altogether. Later I heard that she had formed a relationship which was not
+blessed by any sacred rite.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Notwithstanding the Platonic character of the correspondences, Obici and
+Marchesini remark, there is really a substratum of emotional sexuality
+beneath it, and it is this which finds its expression in the indecorous
+conversations already referred to. The &quot;flame&quot; is a <i>love-fiction, a play
+of sexual love</i>. This characteristic comes out in the frequently romantic
+names, of men and women, invented to sign the letters.</p>
+
+<p>Even in the letters themselves, however, the element of sexual
+impressionability may be traced. &quot;On Friday we went to a service at San
+B.,&quot; writes one who was in an institution directed by nuns, &quot;but
+unfortunately I saw M. L. at a window when I thought she was at A. and I
+was in a nervous state the whole time. Imagine that that dear woman was at
+the window with bare arms, and, as it seemed to me, in her chemise.&quot; No
+doubt a similar impression might have been made on a girl living in her
+own family. But it is certain that the imaginative coloring tends to be
+more lively in those living in colleges and shut off from that varied and
+innocent observation which renders those outside colleges freer and more
+unprejudiced. On a boy who is free to see as many women as he chooses a
+woman's face cannot make such an impression as on a boy who lives in a
+college and who is liable to be, as it were, electrified if he sees any
+object belonging to a woman, especially if he sees it by stealth or during
+a mood of erotism. Such an object calls out a whole series of wanton
+imaginations, which it could not do <a name='2_Page_374'></a>in one who, by his environment, was
+already armed against any tendencies to erotic fetichism. The attraction
+exerted by that which we see but seldom, and around which fancy
+assiduously plays, the attraction of forbidden fruit, produces tendencies
+and habits which could scarcely develop in freedom. Curiosity is acute,
+and is augmented by the obstacles which stand in the way of its
+satisfaction. &quot;Flame&quot; attraction is the beginning of such a morbid
+fetichism. A sentiment which under other conditions would never have gone
+beyond ordinary friendship may thus become a &quot;flame,&quot; and even a &quot;flame&quot;
+of markedly sexual character. Under these influences boys and girls feel
+the purest and simplest sentiments in a hyperesthetic manner. The girls
+here studied have lost an exact conception of the simple manifestations of
+friendship, and think they are giving evidence of exquisite sensibility
+and true friendship by loving a companion to madness; friendship in them
+has become a passion. That this intense desire to love a companion
+passionately is the result of the college environments may be seen by the
+following extract from a letter: &quot;You know, dear, much better than I do
+how acutely girls living away from their own homes, and far from all those
+who are dearest to them on earth, feel the need of loving and being loved.
+You can understand how hard it is to be obliged to live without anyone to
+surround you with affection;&quot; and the writer goes on to say how all her
+love turns to her correspondent.</p>
+
+<p>While there is an unquestionable sexual element in the &quot;flame&quot;
+relationship, this cannot be regarded as an absolute expression of real
+congenital perversion of the sex-instinct. The frequency of the phenomena,
+as well as the fact that, on leaving college to enter social life, the
+girl usually ceases to feel these emotions, are sufficient to show the
+absence of congenital abnormality. The estimate of the frequency of
+&quot;flames&quot; in Normal schools, given to Obici and Marchesini by several lady
+collaborators, was about 60 per cent., but there is no reason to suppose
+that women teachers furnish a larger contingent of perverted individuals
+than other women. The root is organic, but the <a name='2_Page_375'></a>manifestations are ideal
+and Platonic, in contrast with some other manifestations found in
+college-life. No inquiry was made as to the details of solitary sexual
+manifestations in the colleges, the fact that they exist to more or less
+extent being sufficiently recognized. The conversations already referred
+to are a measure of the excitations of sexuality existing in these college
+inmates and multiplied in energy by communication. Such discourse was,
+wrote one collaborator, the order of the day, and it took place chiefly at
+the time when letter-writing also was easiest. It may well be that sensual
+excitations, transformed into ethereal sentiments, serve to increase the
+intensity of the &quot;flames.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Taken altogether, Obici and Marchesini conclude, the flame may be regarded
+as a <i>provisional synthesis</i>. We find here, in solution together, the
+physiological element of incipient sexuality, the psychical element of the
+tenderness natural to this age and sex, the element of occasion offered by
+the environment, and the social element with its nascent altruism.</p>
+
+
+<h5>II.</h5>
+
+<p>That the phenomena described in minute detail by Obici and Marchesini
+closely resemble the phenomena as they exist in English girls' schools is
+indicated by the following communication, for which I am indebted to a
+lady who is familiar with an English girls' college of very modern type:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;From inquiries made in various quarters and through personal observation
+and experience I have come to the conclusion that the romantic and
+emotional attachments formed by girls for their female friends and
+companions, attachments which take a great hold of their minds for the
+time being, are far commoner than is generally supposed among English
+girls, more especially at school or college, or wherever a number of girls
+or young women live together in one institution, and are much secluded.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;As far as I have been able to find out, these attachments&mdash;which have
+their own local names, <i>e.g.</i>, 'raves,' 'spoons,' etc.&mdash;are <a name='2_Page_376'></a>comparatively
+rare in the smaller private schools, and totally absent among girls of the
+poorer class attending Board and National schools, perhaps because they
+mix more freely with the opposite sex.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I can say from personal experience that in one of the largest and best
+English colleges, where I spent some years, 'raving' is especially common
+in spite of arrangements which one would have thought would have abolished
+most unhealthy feelings. The arrangements there are very similar to a
+large boys' college. There are numerous boarding-houses, which have, on an
+average, forty to fifty students. Each house is under the management of a
+well-educated house-mistress assisted by house-governesses (quite separate
+from college-teachers). Each house has a large garden with tennis-courts,
+etc.; and cricket, hockey, and other games are carried on to a large
+extent, games being not only much encouraged, but much enjoyed. Each girl
+has a separate cubicle, or bedroom, and no junior (under 17 years of age)
+is allowed to enter the cubicle, or bedroom, of another without asking
+permission, or to go to the bedrooms during the day. In fact, everything
+is done to discourage any morbid feelings. But all the same, as far as my
+experience goes, the friendships there seem more violent and more
+emotional than in most places, and sex subjects form one of the chief
+topics of conversation.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;In such large schools and colleges these 'raves' are not only numerous,
+but seem to be perennial among the girls of all ages, from 13 years
+upward. Girls under that age may be fond of some other student or teacher,
+but in quite a different way. These 'raves' are not mere friendships in
+the ordinary sense of the word, nor are they incompatible with ordinary
+friendships. A girl with a 'rave' often has several intimate friends for
+whom affection is felt without the emotional feelings and pleasurable
+excitement which characterize a 'rave.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;From what I have been told by those who have experienced these 'raves'
+and have since been in love with men, the emotions called forth in both
+cases were similar, although in the case of the 'rave' this fact was not
+recognized at the time. This appears <a name='2_Page_377'></a>to point to a sexual basis, but, on
+the other hand, there are many cases where the feeling seems to be more
+spiritual, a sort of uplifting of the whole soul with an intense desire to
+lead a very good life&mdash;the feeling being one of reverence more than
+anything else for the loved one, with no desire to become too intimate and
+no desire for physical contact.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Raves,' as a rule, begin quite suddenly. They may be mutual or all on
+one side. In the case of school-girls the mutual 'rave' is generally found
+between two companions, or the girls may have a 'rave' for one of their
+teachers or some grown-up acquaintance, who does not necessarily enter
+into the school-life. In this case there may or may not be a feeling of
+affection for the girl by her 'rave,' though minus all the emotional
+feelings.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Occasionally a senior student will have a 'rave' on a little girl, but
+these cases are rare and not very active in their symptoms, girls over 18
+having fewer 'raves' and generally condemning them.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;In the large school already referred to, of which I have personal
+knowledge, 'raving' was very general, hardly anyone being free from it.
+Any fresh student would soon fall a victim to the fashion, which rather
+points to the fact that it is infectious. Sometimes there might be a lull
+in the general raving, only to reappear after an interval in more or less
+of an epidemic form. Sometimes nearly all the 'raves' were felt by
+students for their teachers; at other times it was more apparent between
+the girls themselves.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Sometimes one teacher was raved on by several girls. In many cases, the
+girls raving on a teacher would have a very great friendship with one of
+their companions&mdash;talking with each other constantly of their respective
+'raves,' describing their feelings and generally letting off steam to one
+another, indulging sometimes in the active demonstrations of affection
+which they were debarred from showing the teacher herself, and in some
+cases having no desire to do so even if they could.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;As far as I have been able to judge, there is not necessarily any
+attraction for physical characteristics, as beauty, elegance, <a name='2_Page_378'></a>etc.; the
+two participants are probably both of strong character or a weak character
+raves on a stronger, but rarely <i>vice vers&acirc;</i>.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I have often noticed that the same person may be raved on at different
+times by several people of different characters and of all ages: say, up
+to 30 years of age. It is hard to say why some persons more than others
+should inspire this feeling. Often they are reserved, without any
+particular physical attraction, and often despising raving and emotional
+friendships, and give no encouragement to them. That the majority of
+'raves' have a sexual basis may be true, but I am sure that in the
+majority of cases where young girls are concerned this is not in the least
+recognized, and no impurity is indulged in or wished for. The majority of
+the girls are entirely ignorant of all sexual matters, and understand
+nothing whatever about them. But they do wonder about them and talk about
+them constantly, more especially when they have a 'rave,' which seems to
+point to some subtle connection between the two. That this ignorance
+exists is largely to be deplored. The subject, if once thought of, is
+always thought of and talked of, and information is at length generally
+gained in a regrettable manner. From personal experience I know the evil
+results that this ignorance and constant endeavoring to find out
+everything has on the mind and bodies of school-girls. If children had the
+natural and simple laws of creation carefully explained to them by their
+parents, much harm would be prevented, and the conversation would not
+always turn on sexual matters. The Bible is often consulted for the
+discovery of hidden mysteries.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Raves' on teachers are far commoner than between two girls. In this case
+the girl makes no secret of her attachment, constantly talking of it and
+describing her feelings to any who care to listen and writing long letters
+to her friends about the same. In the case of two girls there is more
+likely to be a sexual element, great pleasure being taken in close contact
+with one another and frequent kissing and hugging. When parted, long
+letters are written, often daily; they are full of affectionate
+expressions of love, etc., but there is also a frequent reference to <a name='2_Page_379'></a>the
+happiness and desire to do well that their love has inspired them with,
+while often very deeply religious feelings appear to be generated and many
+good resolutions are made. Their various emotional feelings are described
+in every minute detail to each other.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The duration of 'raves' varies. I have known them to last three or four
+years, more often only a few months. Occasionally what began as a 'rave'
+will turn, into a sensible firm friendship. I imagine that there is seldom
+any actual inversion, and on growing up the 'raves' generally cease. That
+the 'ravers' feel and act like a pair of lovers there is no doubt, and the
+majority put down these romantic friendships for their own sex as due, in
+a great extent, in the case of girls at schools, to being without the
+society of the opposite sex. This may be true in some cases, but
+personally I think the question open to discussion. These friendships are
+often found among girls who have left school and have every liberty, even
+among girls who have had numerous flirtations with the opposite sex, who
+cannot be accused of inversion, and who have all the feminine and domestic
+characteristics.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;In illustration of these points I may bring forward the following case:
+A. and B. were two girls at the same college. They belonged to different
+cliques, or sets; occupied different bedrooms; never met in their
+school-work, and were practically only known to one another by name. One
+day they chanced to sit next to one another at some meal. They both
+already had 'raves,' A. on an actor she had lately seen, B. on a married
+woman at her home. The conversation happened to turn on 'raves,' and
+mutual attraction was <i>suddenly</i> felt. From that moment a new interest
+came into their lives. They lived for one another. At the time A. was 14,
+B. a year older. Both were somewhat precocious for their age, were
+practical, with plenty of common sense, very keen on games, interested in
+their lessons, and very independent, but at the same time with marked
+feminine characteristics and popular with the opposite sex. After the
+first feeling of interest there was a subtle excitement and desire <a name='2_Page_380'></a>to
+meet again. All their thoughts were occupied with the subject. Each day
+they managed as many private meetings as possible. They met in the
+passages in order to say good-night with many embraces. As far as possible
+they hid their feelings from the rest of their world. They became
+inseparable, and a very lasting and real, but somewhat emotional,
+affection, in which the sexual element was certainly marked, sprang up
+between them. Although at the time they were both quite ignorant of sexual
+matters, yet they indulged their sexual instincts to some extent. They
+felt surcharged with hitherto unexperienced feelings and emotions,
+instinct urged them to let these have play, but instinctively they also
+had a feeling that to do so would be wrong. This feeling they endeavored
+to argue out and find reasons for. When parted for any length of time they
+felt very miserable and wrote pages to one another every day, pouring
+forth in writing their feelings for one another. In this time of active
+attraction they both became deeply religious for a time. The active part
+of the affection continued for three or four years, and now, after an
+interval of ten years, they are both exceedingly fond of one another,
+although their paths in life are divided and each has since experienced
+love for a man. Both look back upon the sexual element in their friendship
+with some interest. It may be remarked in passing that A. and B. are both
+attractive girls to men and women, and B. especially appears always to
+have roused 'rave' feelings in her own sex, without the slightest
+encouragement on her part. The duration of this 'rave' was exceptionally
+long, the majority only lasting a few months, while some girls have one
+'rave' after another or two or three together.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I may mention one other case, where I believe that if it a sexual basis
+this was not recognized by the parties concerned or their friends. Two
+girls, over 20 years of age, passed in a corridor. A few words were
+exchanged: the beginning of a very warm and fast friendship. They said it
+was <i>not</i> a 'rave.' They were absolutely devoted to one another, but from
+what I know of them and what they have since told me, their feelings were
+quite free from any sexual desires, though their love for <a name='2_Page_381'></a>one another was
+great. When parted they exchanged letters daily, but were always
+endeavoring to urge one another on in all the virtues, and as far as I can
+gather they never gave way to any feeling they thought was not for the
+good of their souls.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Letters and presents are exchanged, vows of eternal love are made,
+quarrels are engaged in for the mere pleasure of reconciliation, and
+jealousy is easily manifested. Although 'raves' are chiefly found among
+school-girls, they are by no means confined to them, but are common among
+any community of women of any age, say, under 30, and are not unknown
+among married women when there is no inversion. In these oases there is
+usually, of course, no ignorance of sexual matters.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Whether there is any direct harm in these friendships I have not been
+able to make up my mind. In the case of school-girls, if there is not too
+much emotion generated and if the sexual feelings are not indulged in, I
+think they may do more good than harm. Later on in life, when all one's
+desires and feelings are at their strongest, it is more doubtful.&quot;</p>
+
+
+<h5>III.</h5>
+
+<p>That the phenomena as found in the girls' colleges of America are exactly
+similar to those in Italy and England is shown, among other evidence, by
+some communications sent to Mr. E. G. Lancaster, of Clark University,
+Worcester, Mass., a few years ago.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. E. G. Lancaster sent out a <i>questionnaire</i> to over 800 teachers and
+older pupils dealing with various points connected with adolescence, and
+received answers from 91 persons containing information which bore on the
+present question.<a name='2_FNanchor_279'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_279'><sup>[279]</sup></a> Of this number, 28 male and 41 female had been in
+love before the age of 25, while 11 of each sex had had no love
+experiences, this indicating, since the women were in a majority, that the
+absence of love experience is more common in men than in women.<a name='2_Page_382'></a> These
+answers were from young people between 16 and 25 years of age. Two males
+and 7 females have loved imaginary characters, while 3 males and not less
+than 46 females speak of passionate love for the same sex. Love of the
+same sex, Lancaster remarks, though not generally known, is very common;
+it is not mere friendship; the love is strong, real, and passionate. It
+may be remarked that these 49 cases were reported without solicitation,
+since there was no reference to homosexual love in the <i>questionnaire</i>.
+Many of the answers to the syllabus are so beautiful, Lancaster observes,
+that if they could be printed in full no comment would be necessary. He
+quotes a few of the answers. Thus a woman of 33 writes: &quot;At 14 I had my
+first case of love, but it was with a girl. It was insane, intense love,
+but had the same quality and sensations as my first love with a man at 18.
+In neither case was the object idealized. I was perfectly aware of their
+faults; nevertheless my whole being was lost, immersed in their existence.
+The first lasted two years, the second seven years. No love has since been
+so intense, but now these persons, though living, are no more to me than
+the veriest stranger.&quot; Another woman of 35 writes: &quot;Girls between the ages
+of 14 and 18 at college or girls' schools often fall in love with the same
+sex. This is not friendship. The loved one is older, more advanced, more
+charming or beautiful. When I was a freshman in college I knew at least
+thirty girls who were in love with a senior. Some sought her because it
+was the fashion, but I knew that my own homage and that of many others was
+sincere and passionate. I loved her because she was brilliant and utterly
+indifferent to the love shown her. She was not pretty, though at the time
+we thought her beautiful. One of her adorers, on being slighted, was ill
+for two weeks. On her return she was speaking to me when the object of our
+admiration came into the room. The shock was too great and she fainted.
+When I reached the senior year I was the recipient of languishing glances,
+original verses, roses, and passionate letters written at midnight and
+three in the morning.&quot; No similar confessions are recorded from men. <a name='2_Page_383'></a></p>
+
+<h5>IV.</h5>
+
+<p>In South America corresponding phenomena have been found in schools and
+colleges of the same class. There they have been especially studied by
+Mercante in the convent High Schools of Buenos Aires where the students
+are girls between the ages of 10 and 22.<a name='2_FNanchor_280'></a><a href='#2_Footnote_280'><sup>[280]</sup></a> Mercante found that
+homosexuality here is not clearly defined or explicit and usually it is
+combined with a predisposition to romanticism and mysticism. It is usually
+of a passive kind, but in this form so widespread as to constitute a kind
+of epidemic. It was most manifest in institutions where the greatest
+stress was placed on religious instruction.</p>
+
+<p>The recreations of the school in question were quiet and enervating;
+active or boisterous sports were prohibited to the end that good manners
+might be cultivated. In the play-rooms, the girls observed the strictest
+etiquette, and discipline was maintained independent of oversight by
+teachers. Mercante could hardly believe, however, that the decorum was
+more than external.</p>
+
+<p>Later, when the girls broke up, they were found in pairs or small groups,
+in corners, on benches, beside the pillars, arm in arm or holding hands.
+What they were speaking of could be surmised. &quot;Their conversation and
+confidences came to me indirectly. They were sweethearts talking about
+their affairs. In spite of the spiritual and feminine character of these
+unions, one element was active, the other passive, thus confirming the
+authorities on this matter, Gamier, R&eacute;gis, Lombroso, Bonfigli.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Mercante found the points of view of the two members of each pair to be
+quite different in moral aspect. &quot;One takes the initiative, she commands,
+she cares for, she offers, she gives, she makes decisions, she considers
+the present, she imagines the future, she smoothes over difficulties,
+gives encouragement and initiative, she commands, she cares for, she
+offers, she gives, she <a name='2_Page_384'></a>docile, gives way in matters of dispute, and
+expresses her affection with sweet words and promises of love and
+submission. The atmosphere, silent and quiet, was, however, charged with
+jealousy, squabble, desires, illusions, dreams, and lamentations.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Mercante's informant assured him that practically every girl had her
+affinity, and that there were at least twenty well-defined love affairs.
+The active party starts the conquest by making eyes, next she becomes more
+intimate, and finally proposes. Women being highly adaptable, the
+neophyte, unless she is rebellious, gets into the spirit of it all. If she
+is not complaisant, she must prepare for conflict, because the prey
+becomes more desirable the more the resistance encountered.</p>
+
+<p>Opportunity was offered to Mercante to observe some of the correspondence
+between the girls. Though of indifferent training and ability in other
+respects, the girls speak and write regarding their affairs with most
+admirable diction and style. No data are given regarding the actual
+intimate relations between the girls.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_279'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_279'>[279]</a> E. G. Lancaster, &quot;The Psychology and Pedagogy of
+Adolescence,&quot; <i>Pedagogical Seminary</i>, July, 1897, p. 88.</p></div>
+
+<div class='note'><p><a name='2_Footnote_280'></a><a href='#2_FNanchor_280'>[280]</a> Victor Mercante, &quot;Fetiquismo y Uranismo feminino en los
+internados educativos,&quot; <i>Archivos de Psiquiatria y Criminologia</i>, 1905,
+pp. 22-30; abstracted by D. C. McMurtrie, <i>Urologic Review</i>, August, 1914.</p></div>
+
+
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<h2><a name='2_INDEX_OF_AUTHORS'></a><a name='2_Page_385'></a>INDEX OF AUTHORS.</h2>
+
+<ul><li>Abraham, <a href='#2_Page_323'>323</a>.</li>
+<li>Adler, A., <a href='#2_Page_90'>90</a>, <a href='#2_Page_294'>294</a>, <a href='#2_Page_297'>297</a>, <a href='#2_Page_304'>304</a>, <a href='#2_Page_306'>306</a>.</li>
+<li>Adler Bey, <a href='#2_Page_13'>13</a>.</li>
+<li>Alain de Lille, <a href='#2_Page_36'>36</a>.</li>
+<li>Aletrino, <a href='#2_Page_321'>321</a>.</li>
+<li>Ammon, <a href='#2_Page_254'>254</a>.</li>
+<li>Angell, J. R., <a href='#2_Page_326'>326</a>.</li>
+<li>Anselm, <a href='#2_Page_40'>40</a>.</li>
+<li>Arber, <a href='#2_Page_43'>43</a>.</li>
+<li>Ariosto, <a href='#2_Page_199'>199</a>.</li>
+<li>Aristophanes, <a href='#2_Page_258'>258</a>.</li>
+<li>Aristotle, <a href='#2_Page_4'>4</a>, <a href='#2_Page_59'>59</a>.</li>
+<li>Aschoff, <a href='#2_Page_319'>319</a>.</li>
+<li>Aubrey, <a href='#2_Page_44'>44</a>.</li></ul>
+
+<ul><li>Bacchaumont, <a href='#2_Page_261'>261</a>.</li>
+<li>Bailly-Maitre, <a href='#2_Page_7'>7</a>.</li>
+<li>Ballantyne, <a href='#2_Page_254'>254</a>, <a href='#2_Page_311'>311</a>.</li>
+<li>Balzac, <a href='#2_Page_25'>25</a>, <a href='#2_Page_199'>199</a>.</li>
+<li>Bartels, Max, <a href='#2_Page_206'>206</a>, <a href='#2_Page_252'>252</a>.</li>
+<li>Bascoul, <a href='#2_Page_198'>198</a>.</li>
+<li>Baumann, <a href='#2_Page_19'>19</a>, <a href='#2_Page_206'>206</a>.</li>
+<li>Bazalgette, <a href='#2_Page_57'>57</a>.</li>
+<li>Beardmore, <a href='#2_Page_9'>9</a>.</li>
+<li>Bell, Clark, <a href='#2_Page_57'>57</a>.</li>
+<li>Bell, Blair, <a href='#2_Page_316'>316</a>.</li>
+<li>Benkert, <a href='#2_Page_2'>2</a>.</li>
+<li>Benson, A. C, <a href='#2_Page_340'>340</a>.</li>
+<li>Berkman, <a href='#2_Page_25'>25</a>.</li>
+<li>Berrichon, <a href='#2_Page_57'>57</a>.</li>
+<li>Bertz, <a href='#2_Page_56'>56</a>.</li>
+<li>Besenval, <a href='#2_Page_351'>351</a>.</li>
+<li>Bethe, <a href='#2_Page_10'>10</a>, <a href='#2_Page_11'>11</a>, <a href='#2_Page_12'>12</a>, <a href='#2_Page_13'>13</a>, <a href='#2_Page_327'>327</a>.</li>
+<li>Biervliet, <a href='#2_Page_88'>88</a>.</li>
+<li>Binet, <a href='#2_Page_302'>302</a>.</li>
+<li>Binet-Valmer, <a href='#2_Page_341'>341</a>.</li>
+<li>Birnbaum, <a href='#2_Page_38'>38</a>.</li>
+<li>Bleuler, <a href='#2_Page_318'>318</a>.</li>
+<li>Bloch, Iwan, <a href='#2_Page_4'>4</a>, <a href='#2_Page_13'>13</a>, <a href='#2_Page_61'>61</a>, <a href='#2_Page_62'>62</a>, <a href='#2_Page_67'>67</a>, <a href='#2_Page_83'>83</a>, <a href='#2_Page_198'>198</a>, <a href='#2_Page_207'>207</a>, <a href='#2_Page_210'>210</a>, <a href='#2_Page_259'>259</a>, <a href='#2_Page_262'>262</a>, <a href='#2_Page_283'>283</a>, <a href='#2_Page_290'>290</a>, <a href='#2_Page_316'>316</a>, <a href='#2_Page_321'>321</a>, <a href='#2_Page_327'>327</a>, <a href='#2_Page_341'>341</a>.</li>
+<li>Blyth, J., <a href='#2_Page_51'>51</a>.</li>
+<li>Body, <a href='#2_Page_341'>341</a>.</li>
+<li>Bombarda, <a href='#2_Page_5'>5</a>.</li>
+<li>Bond, C. J., <a href='#2_Page_313'>313</a>.</li>
+<li>Borel, <a href='#2_Page_332'>332</a>.</li>
+<li>Bouchard, <a href='#2_Page_25'>25</a>, <a href='#2_Page_75'>75</a>.</li>
+<li>Brandt, P., <a href='#2_Page_12'>12</a>.</li>
+<li>Brehm, <a href='#2_Page_4'>4</a>.</li>
+<li>Brill, <a href='#2_Page_331'>331</a>.</li>
+<li>Brown, H., <a href='#2_Page_68'>68</a>.</li>
+<li>Brouardel, <a href='#2_Page_69'>69</a>.</li>
+<li>Brun, C., <a href='#2_Page_200'>200</a>.</li>
+<li>Buchanan, <a href='#2_Page_208'>208</a>.</li>
+<li>Bucke, <a href='#2_Page_52'>52</a>.</li>
+<li>Buffon, <a href='#2_Page_4'>4</a>.</li>
+<li>Burchard, <a href='#2_Page_320'>320</a>.</li>
+<li>Burckhardt, <a href='#2_Page_31'>31</a>.</li>
+<li>Burton, Sir R., <a href='#2_Page_15'>15</a>, <a href='#2_Page_22'>22</a>, <a href='#2_Page_58'>58</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+
+<ul><li>Calesia, <a href='#2_Page_295'>295</a>.</li>
+<li>Campanella, <a href='#2_Page_75'>75</a>.</li>
+<li>Carlier, <a href='#2_Page_25'>25</a>.</li>
+<li>Carpenter, Edward, <a href='#2_Page_2'>2</a>, <a href='#2_Page_134'>134</a> <a href='#2_Page_28'>28</a>, <a href='#2_Page_52'>52</a>, <a href='#2_Page_72'>72</a>, <a href='#2_Page_326'>326</a>, <a href='#2_Page_327'>327</a>, <a href='#2_Page_339'>339</a>.</li>
+<li>Carretto, <a href='#2_Page_67'>67</a>.</li>
+<li>Casanova, <a href='#2_Page_209'>209</a>, <a href='#2_Page_212'>212</a>, <a href='#2_Page_258'>258</a>, <a href='#2_Page_326'>326</a>.</li>
+<li>Casper, <a href='#2_Page_66'>66</a>.</li>
+<li>Castle, <a href='#2_Page_79'>79</a>.</li>
+<li>Cazanova, <a href='#2_Page_25'>25</a>.</li>
+<li>Charcot, <a href='#2_Page_3'>3</a>.</li>
+<li>Chevalier, <a href='#2_Page_5'>5</a>, <a href='#2_Page_24'>24</a>, <a href='#2_Page_69'>69</a>, <a href='#2_Page_210'>210</a>, <a href='#2_Page_299'>299</a>, <a href='#2_Page_312'>312</a>.</li>
+<li>Claiborne, <a href='#2_Page_252'>252</a>.</li>
+<li>Clarke, A. W., <a href='#2_Page_340'>340</a>.</li>
+<li>Clayton, <a href='#2_Page_199'>199</a>.</li>
+<li>C&oelig;lius Aurelianus, <a href='#2_Page_59'>59</a>.</li>
+<li>Coleridge, <a href='#2_Page_41'>41</a>.</li>
+<li>Coriat, <a href='#2_Page_306'>306</a>.</li>
+<li>Corre, <a href='#2_Page_207'>207</a>.</li>
+<li>Croiset, A., <a href='#2_Page_198'>198</a>.</li>
+<li>Crusius, <a href='#2_Page_259'>259</a>.</li>
+<li>Cust, R. H. H., <a href='#2_Page_34'>34</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+
+<ul><li>Dante, <a href='#2_Page_26'>26</a>.</li>
+<li>Darwin, <a href='#2_Page_311'>311</a>.</li>
+<li>Daville, <a href='#2_Page_15'>15</a>.</li>
+<li>Davitt, M., <a href='#2_Page_25'>25</a>.</li>
+<li>Davray, <a href='#2_Page_39'>39</a>.</li>
+<li>Dejob, <a href='#2_Page_31'>31</a>.</li>
+<li>Descaves, <a href='#2_Page_22'>22</a>.</li>
+<li>Dessoir, <a href='#2_Page_79'>79</a>.</li>
+<li>D'Ewes, <a href='#2_Page_44'>44</a>.</li>
+<li>Diaz, B., <a href='#2_Page_17'>17</a>.</li>
+<li>Diderot, <a href='#2_Page_199'>199</a>.<a name='2_Page_386'></a></li>
+<li>Dostoieffsky, <a href='#2_Page_25'>25</a>.</li>
+<li>Dubois, <a href='#2_Page_15'>15</a>.</li>
+<li>Duflos, <a href='#2_Page_252'>252</a>.</li>
+<li>Dukes, O., <a href='#2_Page_326'>326</a>.</li>
+<li>Dupr&eacute;, <a href='#2_Page_252'>252</a>.</li>
+<li>Duviquet, <a href='#2_Page_25'>25</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+
+<ul><li>Edmonds, J. M., <a href='#2_Page_198'>198</a>.</li>
+<li>Eekhoud, <a href='#2_Page_34'>34</a>, <a href='#2_Page_340'>340</a>.</li>
+<li>Ellis, Havelock, <a href='#2_Page_43'>43</a>, <a href='#2_Page_76'>76</a>, <a href='#2_Page_196'>196</a>, <a href='#2_Page_201'>201</a>, <a href='#2_Page_204'>204</a>, <a href='#2_Page_259'>259</a>, <a href='#2_Page_277'>277</a>, <a href='#2_Page_279'>279</a>, <a href='#2_Page_282'>282</a>, <a href='#2_Page_290'>290</a>, <a href='#2_Page_299'>299</a>, <a href='#2_Page_318'>318</a>.</li>
+<li>Engelmann, <a href='#2_Page_171'>171</a>.</li>
+<li>Escoube, <a href='#2_Page_57'>57</a>.</li>
+<li>Essebac, <a href='#2_Page_340'>340</a>.</li>
+<li>Eulenburg, <a href='#2_Page_310'>310</a>.</li>
+<li>Ewart, C. T., <a href='#2_Page_255'>255</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+
+<ul><li>F&eacute;r&eacute;, <a href='#2_Page_5'>5</a>, <a href='#2_Page_85'>85</a>, <a href='#2_Page_292'>292</a> <a href='#2_Page_318'>318</a>, <a href='#2_Page_328'>328</a>, <a href='#2_Page_330'>330</a>, <a href='#2_Page_333'>333</a>, <a href='#2_Page_335'>335</a>, <a href='#2_Page_341'>341</a>.</li>
+<li>Ferenczi, <a href='#2_Page_81'>81</a>, <a href='#2_Page_305'>305</a>, <a href='#2_Page_331'>331</a>.</li>
+<li>Fernan, <a href='#2_Page_62'>62</a>.</li>
+<li>Ferrero, <a href='#2_Page_212'>212</a>.</li>
+<li>Flatau, <a href='#2_Page_255'>255</a>.</li>
+<li>Fliess, <a href='#2_Page_290'>290</a>.</li>
+<li>Flournoy, <a href='#2_Page_318'>318</a>.</li>
+<li>Flynt, Josiah, <a href='#2_Page_359'>359</a>.</li>
+<li>Foley, <a href='#2_Page_10'>10</a>.</li>
+<li>Forel, <a href='#2_Page_329'>329</a>, <a href='#2_Page_342'>342</a>.</li>
+<li>Frazer, Sir J. G., <a href='#2_Page_29'>29</a>.</li>
+<li>Freimark, <a href='#2_Page_197'>197</a>.</li>
+<li>Freud, <a href='#2_Page_32'>32</a>, <a href='#2_Page_80'>80</a>, <a href='#2_Page_83'>83</a>, <a href='#2_Page_90'>90</a>, <a href='#2_Page_304'>304</a>, <a href='#2_Page_306'>306</a>, <a href='#2_Page_307'>307</a>, <a href='#2_Page_321'>321</a>.</li>
+<li>Frey, L., <a href='#2_Page_35'>35</a>.</li>
+<li>Fuchs, A., <a href='#2_Page_83'>83</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+
+<ul><li>Galton, <a href='#2_Page_294'>294</a>.</li>
+<li>Gandavo, <a href='#2_Page_205'>205</a>.</li>
+<li>Garrod, A. B., <a href='#2_Page_316'>316</a>.</li>
+<li>Gasparini, <a href='#2_Page_253'>253</a>.</li>
+<li>Gaudenzi, <a href='#2_Page_32'>32</a>.</li>
+<li>Gautier, A., <a href='#2_Page_255'>255</a>.</li>
+<li>Gautier, T., <a href='#2_Page_199'>199</a>.</li>
+<li>Gide, <a href='#2_Page_49'>49</a>, <a href='#2_Page_340'>340</a>.</li>
+<li>Gilford, H., <a href='#2_Page_291'>291</a>.</li>
+<li>Gillen, <a href='#2_Page_21'>21</a>.</li>
+<li>Gleichen-Russwurm, <a href='#2_Page_339'>339</a>.</li>
+<li>Gley, <a href='#2_Page_310'>310</a>.</li>
+<li>Godard, <a href='#2_Page_75'>75</a>, <a href='#2_Page_207'>207</a>.</li>
+<li>Goldschwend, <a href='#2_Page_255'>255</a>.</li>
+<li>Gomperz, <a href='#2_Page_311'>311</a>.</li>
+<li>Gurlitt, <a href='#2_Page_76'>76</a>, <a href='#2_Page_326'>326</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+
+<ul><li>Haddon, A. C., <a href='#2_Page_9'>9</a>.</li>
+<li>Haeckel, <a href='#2_Page_311'>311</a>.</li>
+<li>Hahn, <a href='#2_Page_10'>10</a>.</li>
+<li>Halban, <a href='#2_Page_313'>313</a>, <a href='#2_Page_315'>315</a>.</li>
+<li>Hammer, <a href='#2_Page_210'>210</a>.</li>
+<li>Hamon, <a href='#2_Page_23'>23</a>.</li>
+<li>Hardman, <a href='#2_Page_20'>20</a>.</li>
+<li>Harris-Liston, <a href='#2_Page_252'>252</a>.</li>
+<li>Hart, Berry, <a href='#2_Page_314'>314</a>.</li>
+<li>Heape, <a href='#2_Page_79'>79</a>, <a href='#2_Page_313'>313</a>.</li>
+<li>Hegar, <a href='#2_Page_254'>254</a>.</li>
+<li>Heim, <a href='#2_Page_6'>6</a>.</li>
+<li>Herman, <a href='#2_Page_14'>14</a>.</li>
+<li>Herondas, <a href='#2_Page_258'>258</a>.</li>
+<li>Hirschfeld,<br />
+<span class='i8'> <a href='#2_Page_3'>3</a>, <a href='#2_Page_4'>4</a>, <a href='#2_Page_9'>9</a>, <a href='#2_Page_13'>13</a>, <a href='#2_Page_24'>24</a>, <a href='#2_Page_27'>27</a>, <a href='#2_Page_28'>28</a>, <a href='#2_Page_35'>35</a>, <a href='#2_Page_60'>60</a>, <a href='#2_Page_61'>61</a>, <a href='#2_Page_62'>62</a>, <a href='#2_Page_72'>72</a>, <a href='#2_Page_73'>73</a>, <a href='#2_Page_83'>83</a>, <a href='#2_Page_86'>86</a>, <a href='#2_Page_90'>90</a>, <a href='#2_Page_91'>91</a>, <a href='#2_Page_196'>196</a>,<br /></span>
+<span class='i8'> <a href='#2_Page_203'>203</a>, <a href='#2_Page_210'>210</a>, <a href='#2_Page_251'>251</a>, <a href='#2_Page_255'>255</a>, <a href='#2_Page_256'>256</a>, <a href='#2_Page_261'>261</a>, <a href='#2_Page_263'>263</a>, <a href='#2_Page_265'>265</a>, <a href='#2_Page_268'>268</a>, <a href='#2_Page_273'>273</a>, <a href='#2_Page_278'>278</a>, <a href='#2_Page_280'>280</a>, <a href='#2_Page_282'>282</a>,<br /></span>
+<span class='i8'> <a href='#2_Page_284'>284</a>, <a href='#2_Page_287'>287</a>, <a href='#2_Page_289'>289</a>, <a href='#2_Page_292'>292</a>, <a href='#2_Page_301'>301</a>, <a href='#2_Page_309'>309</a>, <a href='#2_Page_315'>315</a>, <a href='#2_Page_316'>316</a>, <a href='#2_Page_320'>320</a>, <a href='#2_Page_323'>323</a>, <a href='#2_Page_325'>325</a>, <a href='#2_Page_330'>330</a>, <a href='#2_Page_331'>331</a>,<br /></span>
+<span class='i8'> <a href='#2_Page_332'>332</a>, <a href='#2_Page_334'>334</a>, <a href='#2_Page_335'>335</a>, <a href='#2_Page_341'>341</a>, <a href='#2_Page_353'>353</a>.<br /></span></li>
+<li>Hoche, <a href='#2_Page_78'>78</a>.</li>
+<li>Hochstetter, S., <a href='#2_Page_196'>196</a>.</li>
+<li>Holder, <a href='#2_Page_18'>18</a>, <a href='#2_Page_205'>205</a>.</li>
+<li>Holmberg, <a href='#2_Page_17'>17</a>.</li>
+<li>Holmes, W. G., <a href='#2_Page_346'>346</a>.</li>
+<li>Homer, <a href='#2_Page_11'>11</a>.</li>
+<li>Home, H., <a href='#2_Page_32'>32</a>.</li>
+<li>Horneffer, <a href='#2_Page_28'>28</a>, <a href='#2_Page_341'>341</a>.</li>
+<li>H&ouml;ssli, <a href='#2_Page_66'>66</a>, <a href='#2_Page_287'>287</a>, <a href='#2_Page_311'>311</a>.</li>
+<li>Hughes, C. H., <a href='#2_Page_328'>328</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+
+<ul><li>Ingegnieros, <a href='#2_Page_295'>295</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+
+<ul><li>Jacobs, <a href='#2_Page_206'>206</a>.</li>
+<li>James, W., <a href='#2_Page_80'>80</a>, <a href='#2_Page_299'>299</a>.</li>
+<li>Jastrow, <a href='#2_Page_299'>299</a>.</li>
+<li>Jekels, <a href='#2_Page_305'>305</a>.</li>
+<li>John of Salisbury, <a href='#2_Page_40'>40</a>.</li>
+<li>Johnston, J., <a href='#2_Page_56'>56</a>.</li>
+<li>Jones, Ernest, <a href='#2_Page_306'>306</a>.</li>
+<li>Jones, W., <a href='#2_Page_205'>205</a>.</li>
+<li>Juliusburger, <a href='#2_Page_311'>311</a>, <a href='#2_Page_324'>324</a>.</li>
+<li>Justi, <a href='#2_Page_35'>35</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+
+<ul><li>Karsch, <a href='#2_Page_4'>4</a>, <a href='#2_Page_6'>6</a>, <a href='#2_Page_8'>8</a>, <a href='#2_Page_29'>29</a>, <a href='#2_Page_66'>66</a>, <a href='#2_Page_199'>199</a>, <a href='#2_Page_205'>205</a>.</li>
+<li>Kiefer, <a href='#2_Page_12'>12</a>.</li>
+<li>Kiernan, <a href='#2_Page_71'>71</a>, <a href='#2_Page_201'>201</a>, <a href='#2_Page_258'>258</a>.</li>
+<li>Klaatsch, <a href='#2_Page_21'>21</a>.</li>
+<li>Knapp, <a href='#2_Page_12'>12</a>.</li>
+<li>Kocher, <a href='#2_Page_207'>207</a>, <a href='#2_Page_289'>289</a>.</li>
+<li>Konradin, <a href='#2_Page_341'>341</a>.</li>
+<li>Krafft-Ebing,<br />
+<span class='i8'> <a href='#2_Page_2'>2</a>, <a href='#2_Page_26'>26</a>, <a href='#2_Page_69'>69</a>, <a href='#2_Page_82'>82</a>, <a href='#2_Page_83'>83</a>, <a href='#2_Page_84'>84</a>, <a href='#2_Page_90'>90</a>, <a href='#2_Page_195'>195</a>, <a href='#2_Page_201'>201</a>, <a href='#2_Page_203'>203</a>, <a href='#2_Page_256'>256</a>, <a href='#2_Page_276'>276</a>, <a href='#2_Page_290'>290</a> <a href='#2_Page_312'>312</a>,<br /></span>
+<span class='i8'> <a href='#2_Page_320'>320</a>, <a href='#2_Page_328'>328</a>, <a href='#2_Page_329'>329</a>, <a href='#2_Page_332'>332</a>, <a href='#2_Page_354'>354</a>.<a name='2_Page_387'></a><br /></span></li>
+<li>Krauss, F. S., <a href='#2_Page_13'>13</a>.</li>
+<li>Kupffer, E. von, <a href='#2_Page_339'>339</a>.</li>
+<li>Kurella, <a href='#2_Page_262'>262</a>, <a href='#2_Page_312'>312</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+
+<ul><li>Laborde, <a href='#2_Page_36'>36</a>.</li>
+<li>Lacassagne, <a href='#2_Page_5'>5</a>, <a href='#2_Page_69'>69</a>.</li>
+<li>Lancaster, E. G., <a href='#2_Page_218'>218</a>, <a href='#2_Page_381'>381</a>.</li>
+<li>Langsdorff, <a href='#2_Page_16'>16</a>.</li>
+<li>Lapointe, <a href='#2_Page_315'>315</a>.</li>
+<li>Lasnet, <a href='#2_Page_19'>19</a>.</li>
+<li>Laupts, <i>see</i> Saint-Paul, G.</li>
+<li>Laurent, <a href='#2_Page_290'>290</a>.</li>
+<li>Laycock, <a href='#2_Page_213'>213</a>.</li>
+<li>Lefroy, E. C., <a href='#2_Page_339'>339</a>.</li>
+<li>Legludic, <a href='#2_Page_354'>354</a>.</li>
+<li>Lepelletier, <a href='#2_Page_57'>57</a>.</li>
+<li>Leppmann, <a href='#2_Page_85'>85</a>, <a href='#2_Page_270'>270</a>.</li>
+<li>L'Estoile, P. de, <a href='#2_Page_36'>36</a>.</li>
+<li>Letamendi, <a href='#2_Page_312'>312</a>.</li>
+<li>Levetzow, <a href='#2_Page_196'>196</a>.</li>
+<li>L&eacute;vi, <a href='#2_Page_255'>255</a>.</li>
+<li>Libert, <a href='#2_Page_37'>37</a>.</li>
+<li>Licht, <a href='#2_Page_12'>12</a>.</li>
+<li>Lisiansky, <a href='#2_Page_17'>17</a>.</li>
+<li>Lombroso, <a href='#2_Page_68'>68</a>, <a href='#2_Page_212'>212</a>.</li>
+<li>Lorion, <a href='#2_Page_289'>289</a>.</li>
+<li>L&ouml;wenfeld, <a href='#2_Page_321'>321</a>.</li>
+<li>Lowie, <a href='#2_Page_205'>205</a>.</li>
+<li>Lydston, <a href='#2_Page_71'>71</a>, <a href='#2_Page_273'>273</a>, <a href='#2_Page_312'>312</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul><li>Macdonald, A., <a href='#2_Page_201'>201</a>.</li>
+<li>Magnan, <a href='#2_Page_3'>3</a>, <a href='#2_Page_310'>310</a>, <a href='#2_Page_315'>315</a>, <a href='#2_Page_320'>320</a>.</li>
+<li>Maitland, <a href='#2_Page_41'>41</a>.</li>
+<li>Mantegazza, <a href='#2_Page_26'>26</a>.</li>
+<li>Marchesini, <a href='#2_Page_80'>80</a>, <a href='#2_Page_218'>218</a>, <a href='#2_Page_368'>368</a>.</li>
+<li>Marie de France, <a href='#2_Page_35'>35</a>.</li>
+<li>Marro, <a href='#2_Page_78'>78</a>, <a href='#2_Page_320'>320</a>.</li>
+<li>Marshall, F. H. R., <a href='#2_Page_79'>79</a>, <a href='#2_Page_80'>80</a>, <a href='#2_Page_314'>314</a>.</li>
+<li>Martineau, <a href='#2_Page_218'>218</a>.</li>
+<li>Martius, <a href='#2_Page_17'>17</a>.</li>
+<li>Mason, <a href='#2_Page_49'>49</a>.</li>
+<li>Matignon, <a href='#2_Page_14'>14</a>, <a href='#2_Page_207'>207</a>.</li>
+<li>Mayne, Xavier, <a href='#2_Page_71'>71</a>, <a href='#2_Page_340'>340</a>.</li>
+<li>McMurtrie, <a href='#2_Page_26'>26</a>, <a href='#2_Page_205'>205</a>, <a href='#2_Page_212'>212</a>, <a href='#2_Page_383'>383</a>.</li>
+<li>Meige, <a href='#2_Page_291'>291</a>.</li>
+<li>Meissner, B., <a href='#2_Page_9'>9</a>.</li>
+<li>Mercante, <a href='#2_Page_212'>212</a>, <a href='#2_Page_383'>383</a>.</li>
+<li>Merzbach, <a href='#2_Page_283'>283</a>, <a href='#2_Page_293'>293</a>, <a href='#2_Page_330'>330</a>.</li>
+<li>Meynert, <a href='#2_Page_309'>309</a>, <a href='#2_Page_332'>332</a>.</li>
+<li>Middleton, <a href='#2_Page_245'>245</a>.</li>
+<li>M&ouml;bius, <a href='#2_Page_320'>320</a>.</li>
+<li>Moerenhout, <a href='#2_Page_205'>205</a>.</li>
+<li>Moffat, D., <a href='#2_Page_36'>36</a>.</li>
+<li>Moll, <br />
+<span class='i8'> <a href='#2_Page_2'>2</a>, <a href='#2_Page_6'>6</a>, <a href='#2_Page_24'>24</a>, <a href='#2_Page_27'>27</a>, <a href='#2_Page_35'>35</a>, <a href='#2_Page_43'>43</a>, <a href='#2_Page_60'>60</a>, <a href='#2_Page_71'>71</a>, <a href='#2_Page_80'>80</a>, <a href='#2_Page_84'>84</a>, <a href='#2_Page_91'>91</a>, <a href='#2_Page_203'>203</a>, <a href='#2_Page_210'>210</a>, <a href='#2_Page_245'>245</a>, <a href='#2_Page_255'>255</a>, <a href='#2_Page_259'>259</a>, <a href='#2_Page_261'>261</a>,<br /></span>
+<span class='i8'> <a href='#2_Page_265'>265</a>, <a href='#2_Page_266'>266</a>, <a href='#2_Page_276'>276</a>, <a href='#2_Page_279'>279</a>, <a href='#2_Page_286'>286</a>, <a href='#2_Page_288'>288</a>, <a href='#2_Page_294'>294</a>, <a href='#2_Page_296'>296</a>, <a href='#2_Page_309'>309</a>, <a href='#2_Page_321'>321</a>, <a href='#2_Page_323'>323</a>, <a href='#2_Page_325'>325</a>, <a href='#2_Page_326'>326</a>, <a href='#2_Page_329'>329</a>,<br /></span>
+<span class='i8'> <a href='#2_Page_330'>330</a>, <a href='#2_Page_333'>333</a>, <a href='#2_Page_334'>334</a>, <a href='#2_Page_350'>350</a>, <a href='#2_Page_355'>355</a>.<br /></span></li>
+<li>Monk of Evesham, <a href='#2_Page_41'>41</a>.</li>
+<li>Montaigne, <a href='#2_Page_259'>259</a>.</li>
+<li>Morache, <a href='#2_Page_14'>14</a>.</li>
+<li>Moreau, <a href='#2_Page_74'>74</a>, <a href='#2_Page_276'>276</a>.</li>
+<li>Morel, <a href='#2_Page_320'>320</a>.</li>
+<li>Moskowski, <a href='#2_Page_20'>20</a>.</li>
+<li>Moyer, <a href='#2_Page_260'>260</a>.</li>
+<li>Muccioli, <a href='#2_Page_7'>7</a>.</li>
+<li>M&uuml;ller, F. C., <a href='#2_Page_195'>195</a>.</li>
+<li>Mure, W., <a href='#2_Page_197'>197</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+
+<ul><li>N&auml;cke, <a href='#2_Page_11'>11</a>, <a href='#2_Page_13'>13</a>, <a href='#2_Page_62'>62</a>, <a href='#2_Page_83'>83</a>, <a href='#2_Page_84'>84</a>, <a href='#2_Page_91'>91</a>, <a href='#2_Page_265'>265</a>, <a href='#2_Page_266'>266</a>, <a href='#2_Page_276'>276</a>, <a href='#2_Page_280'>280</a>, <a href='#2_Page_282'>282</a>, <a href='#2_Page_288'>288</a>, <a href='#2_Page_309'>309</a>, <a href='#2_Page_310'>310</a>, <a href='#2_Page_320'>320</a>, <a href='#2_Page_324'>324</a>, <a href='#2_Page_328'>328</a>, <a href='#2_Page_329'>329</a>, <a href='#2_Page_332'>332</a>.</li>
+<li>Neugebauer, <a href='#2_Page_315'>315</a>.</li>
+<li>Niceforo, <a href='#2_Page_213'>213</a>, <a href='#2_Page_282'>282</a>.</li>
+<li>Nicholson, J. G., <a href='#2_Page_339'>339</a>.</li>
+<li>Nicklin, <a href='#2_Page_43'>43</a>.</li>
+<li>Norman, Conolly, <a href='#2_Page_80'>80</a>.</li>
+<li>Nortal, <a href='#2_Page_325'>325</a>, <a href='#2_Page_341'>341</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+
+<ul><li>Obici, <a href='#2_Page_80'>80</a>, <a href='#2_Page_218'>218</a>, <a href='#2_Page_368'>368</a>.</li>
+<li>Oefele, <a href='#2_Page_9'>9</a>.</li>
+<li>Olano, <a href='#2_Page_290'>290</a>.</li>
+<li>Oppenheim, <a href='#2_Page_295'>295</a>.</li>
+<li>Ordericus Vitalis, <a href='#2_Page_40'>40</a>.</li>
+<li>Ortvay, <a href='#2_Page_305'>305</a>.</li>
+<li>Otis, M., <a href='#2_Page_288'>288</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+
+<ul><li>Parent-Duch&acirc;telet, <a href='#2_Page_210'>210</a>, <a href='#2_Page_256'>256</a>.</li>
+<li>Parish, <a href='#2_Page_318'>318</a>.</li>
+<li>Parlagreco, <a href='#2_Page_32'>32</a>.</li>
+<li>Pavia, <a href='#2_Page_62'>62</a>.</li>
+<li>Petronius, <a href='#2_Page_24'>24</a>.</li>
+<li>Pfister, <a href='#2_Page_341'>341</a>.</li>
+<li>Plant, <a href='#2_Page_254'>254</a>.</li>
+<li>Platen, <a href='#2_Page_339'>339</a>.</li>
+<li>Plato, <a href='#2_Page_2'>2</a>, <a href='#2_Page_12'>12</a>, <a href='#2_Page_195'>195</a>, <a href='#2_Page_339'>339</a>.</li>
+<li>Platt, J. A., <a href='#2_Page_198'>198</a>.</li>
+<li>Ploss, <a href='#2_Page_206'>206</a>.</li>
+<li>Plutarch, <a href='#2_Page_11'>11</a>.</li>
+<li>Pocock, R., <a href='#2_Page_7'>7</a>.</li>
+<li>Poisson, <a href='#2_Page_326'>326</a>.</li>
+<li>Pollock, <a href='#2_Page_41'>41</a>.</li>
+<li>Praetorius, Numa, <a href='#2_Page_32'>32</a>, <a href='#2_Page_48'>48</a>, <a href='#2_Page_49'>49</a>, <a href='#2_Page_62'>62</a>, <a href='#2_Page_84'>84</a>, <a href='#2_Page_91'>91</a>, <a href='#2_Page_284'>284</a>, <a href='#2_Page_288'>288</a>, <a href='#2_Page_308'>308</a>, <a href='#2_Page_330'>330</a>, <a href='#2_Page_341'>341</a>, <a href='#2_Page_342'>342</a>, <a href='#2_Page_347'>347</a>.</li>
+<li>Preuss, J., <a href='#2_Page_3'>3</a>.</li>
+<li>Prynne, <a href='#2_Page_287'>287</a>.<a name='2_Page_388'></a></li>
+</ul>
+
+
+<ul><li>Queringhi, <a href='#2_Page_34'>34</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+
+<ul><li>Rachilde, <a href='#2_Page_340'>340</a>.</li>
+<li>Raffalovich, <a href='#2_Page_34'>34</a>, <a href='#2_Page_38'>38</a>, <a href='#2_Page_44'>44</a>, <a href='#2_Page_48'>48</a>, <a href='#2_Page_49'>49</a>, <a href='#2_Page_72'>72</a>, <a href='#2_Page_268'>268</a>, <a href='#2_Page_329'>329</a>, <a href='#2_Page_341'>341</a>.</li>
+<li>Rank, O., <a href='#2_Page_279'>279</a>.</li>
+<li>Ransome, <a href='#2_Page_49'>49</a>.</li>
+<li>Reclus, Elie, <a href='#2_Page_28'>28</a>.</li>
+<li>Reid, Forrest, <a href='#2_Page_340'>340</a>.</li>
+<li>Ribot, <a href='#2_Page_318'>318</a>.</li>
+<li>Ritti, <a href='#2_Page_68'>68</a>.</li>
+<li>Rivers, W. C., <a href='#2_Page_56'>56</a>.</li>
+<li>Rode, L&eacute;on de, <a href='#2_Page_349'>349</a>.</li>
+<li>Rohleder, <a href='#2_Page_321'>321</a>, <a href='#2_Page_327'>327</a>, <a href='#2_Page_330'>330</a>.</li>
+<li>R&ouml;mer, <a href='#2_Page_265'>265</a>, <a href='#2_Page_311'>311</a>.</li>
+<li>Rosenstein, G., <a href='#2_Page_294'>294</a>.</li>
+<li>Roth, <a href='#2_Page_21'>21</a>.</li>
+<li>Roubinovitch, <a href='#2_Page_332'>332</a>.</li>
+<li>Roux, <a href='#2_Page_259'>259</a>.</li>
+<li>Rowley, <a href='#2_Page_245'>245</a>.</li>
+<li>R&uuml;ling, A., <a href='#2_Page_196'>196</a>, <a href='#2_Page_262'>262</a>.</li>
+<li>Rutherford, <a href='#2_Page_8'>8</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+
+<ul><li>Sadger, <a href='#2_Page_39'>39</a>, <a href='#2_Page_89'>89</a>, <a href='#2_Page_90'>90</a>, <a href='#2_Page_304'>304</a>, <a href='#2_Page_305'>305</a>, <a href='#2_Page_331'>331</a>.</li>
+<li>Saint-Paul, G., <a href='#2_Page_62'>62</a>, <a href='#2_Page_69'>69</a>, <a href='#2_Page_298'>298</a>.</li>
+<li>Sainte-Claire, Deville, <a href='#2_Page_5'>5</a>.</li>
+<li>Salillas, <a href='#2_Page_209'>209</a>.</li>
+<li>Savage, Sir G., <a href='#2_Page_66'>66</a>.</li>
+<li>Scheffler, <a href='#2_Page_25'>25</a>, <a href='#2_Page_32'>32</a>.</li>
+<li>Schmid, A., <a href='#2_Page_297'>297</a>.</li>
+<li>Schopenhauer, <a href='#2_Page_84'>84</a>.</li>
+<li>Schouten, <a href='#2_Page_3'>3</a>, <a href='#2_Page_67'>67</a>, <a href='#2_Page_196'>196</a>.</li>
+<li>Schrenck-Notzing, <a href='#2_Page_83'>83</a>, <a href='#2_Page_270'>270</a>, <a href='#2_Page_271'>271</a>, <a href='#2_Page_302'>302</a>, <a href='#2_Page_328'>328</a>, <a href='#2_Page_329'>329</a>.</li>
+<li>Schultz, <a href='#2_Page_36'>36</a>, <a href='#2_Page_38'>38</a>.</li>
+<li>Schur, <a href='#2_Page_39'>39</a>.</li>
+<li>Scott, Colin, <a href='#2_Page_282'>282</a>.</li>
+<li>Seitz, <a href='#2_Page_2'>2</a>.</li>
+<li>Seligmann, <a href='#2_Page_20'>20</a>, <a href='#2_Page_313'>313</a>.</li>
+<li>Selous, E., <a href='#2_Page_6'>6</a>.</li>
+<li>S&eacute;rieux, <a href='#2_Page_37'>37</a>.</li>
+<li>Shattock, <a href='#2_Page_313'>313</a>.</li>
+<li>Shufeldt, <a href='#2_Page_327'>327</a>.</li>
+<li>Smith, Theodate, <a href='#2_Page_218'>218</a>.</li>
+<li>Smollett, <a href='#2_Page_46'>46</a>.</li>
+<li>Spranger, <a href='#2_Page_39'>39</a>.</li>
+<li>Steinach, <a href='#2_Page_5'>5</a>.</li>
+<li>Stekel, <a href='#2_Page_81'>81</a>, <a href='#2_Page_304'>304</a>, <a href='#2_Page_331'>331</a>.</li>
+<li>Stephanus, <a href='#2_Page_12'>12</a>.</li>
+<li>Strauch, <a href='#2_Page_253'>253</a>.</li>
+<li>Stubbes, <a href='#2_Page_287'>287</a>.</li>
+<li>Sturgis, H. O., <a href='#2_Page_340'>340</a>.</li>
+<li>Sutton, Sir J. Bland, <a href='#2_Page_313'>313</a>.</li>
+<li>Symonds, J. A., <a href='#2_Page_3'>3</a>, <a href='#2_Page_12'>12</a>, <a href='#2_Page_25'>25</a>, <a href='#2_Page_30'>30</a>, <a href='#2_Page_32'>32</a>, <a href='#2_Page_51'>51</a>, <a href='#2_Page_68'>68</a>, <a href='#2_Page_72'>72</a>, <a href='#2_Page_317'>317</a>, <a href='#2_Page_340'>340</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+
+<ul><li>Talbot, <a href='#2_Page_169'>169</a>.</li>
+<li>Tamassia, <a href='#2_Page_3'>3</a>, <a href='#2_Page_68'>68</a>.</li>
+<li>Tarde, <a href='#2_Page_75'>75</a>.</li>
+<li>Tardieu, <a href='#2_Page_67'>67</a>, <a href='#2_Page_299'>299</a>.</li>
+<li>Tarnowsky, <a href='#2_Page_23'>23</a>.</li>
+<li>Tennyson, <a href='#2_Page_339'>339</a>.</li>
+<li>Thoinot, <a href='#2_Page_84'>84</a>, <a href='#2_Page_282'>282</a>.</li>
+<li>Tilly, <a href='#2_Page_204'>204</a>.</li>
+<li>Traubel, <a href='#2_Page_54'>54</a>.</li>
+<li>Turnbull, <a href='#2_Page_18'>18</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+
+<ul><li>Ulrichs, <a href='#2_Page_2'>2</a>, <a href='#2_Page_22'>22</a>, <a href='#2_Page_61'>61</a>, <a href='#2_Page_67'>67</a>, <a href='#2_Page_279'>279</a>, <a href='#2_Page_310'>310</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+
+<ul><li>Vanbrugh, <a href='#2_Page_46'>46</a>.</li>
+<li>Virchow, <a href='#2_Page_253'>253</a>, <a href='#2_Page_319'>319</a>.</li>
+<li>Vivien, Ren&eacute;e, <a href='#2_Page_200'>200</a>, <a href='#2_Page_340'>340</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+
+<ul><li>Weeks, <a href='#2_Page_19'>19</a>.</li>
+<li>Weigand, <a href='#2_Page_10'>10</a>.</li>
+<li>Weismann, <a href='#2_Page_311'>311</a>.</li>
+<li>Weissenberg, <a href='#2_Page_252'>252</a>.</li>
+<li>Westermarck, <a href='#2_Page_30'>30</a>, <a href='#2_Page_347'>347</a>.</li>
+<li>Wey, H. D., <a href='#2_Page_25'>25</a>, <a href='#2_Page_290'>290</a>.</li>
+<li>Weysse, <a href='#2_Page_282'>282</a>.</li>
+<li>Wheeler, <a href='#2_Page_20'>20</a>.</li>
+<li>Whitman, Walt., <a href='#2_Page_339'>339</a>.</li>
+<li>Wilamowitz-Moellendorff, <a href='#2_Page_198'>198</a>, <a href='#2_Page_200'>200</a>.</li>
+<li>Wilhelm, E., <a href='#2_Page_328'>328</a>.</li>
+<li>Willy, <a href='#2_Page_340'>340</a>.</li>
+<li>Wilson, J. M., <a href='#2_Page_326'>326</a>.</li>
+<li>Wise, <a href='#2_Page_246'>246</a>.</li>
+<li>Witry, <a href='#2_Page_37'>37</a>.</li>
+<li>Wright, T., <a href='#2_Page_50'>50</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+
+<ul><li>Zola, <a href='#2_Page_199'>199</a>.</li>
+<li>Zuccarelli, <a href='#2_Page_250'>250</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<h2><a name='2_INDEX_OF_SUBJECTS'></a><a name='2_Page_389'></a>INDEX OF SUBJECTS.</h2>
+
+<ul><li>Abnormalities,
+<ul><li> physical, <a href='#2_Page_289'>289</a> <i>et seq.</i></li></ul></li>
+<li>Abnormality and disease,
+<ul><li> difference between, <a href='#2_Page_319'>319</a>.</li></ul></li>
+<li>Acquired inversion, <a href='#2_Page_82'>82</a>, <a href='#2_Page_303'>303</a>.</li>
+<li>Actors and homosexuality, <a href='#2_Page_287'>287</a>, <a href='#2_Page_294'>294</a>, <a href='#2_Page_295'>295</a>.</li>
+<li>Actresses,
+<ul><li> homosexuality among, <a href='#2_Page_215'>215</a>.</li></ul></li>
+<li>Adaptation therapy, <a href='#2_Page_331'>331</a>.</li>
+<li>Advertisements,
+<ul><li> homosexual, <a href='#2_Page_262'>262</a>.</li></ul></li>
+<li>Africa,
+<ul><li> homosexuality in, <a href='#2_Page_19'>19</a>.</li></ul></li>
+<li>Albanians,
+<ul><li> homosexuality among, <a href='#2_Page_10'>10</a>.</li></ul></li>
+<li>Aleuts,
+<ul><li> homosexuality among, <a href='#2_Page_16'>16</a>.</li></ul></li>
+<li>Ambisexuality, <a href='#2_Page_81'>81</a>.</li>
+<li>Anal eroticism, <a href='#2_Page_305'>305</a>.</li>
+<li>Anglo-Saxons, <a href='#2_Page_204'>204</a>.</li>
+<li>Animals,
+<ul><li> homosexuality in, <a href='#2_Page_4'>4</a> <i>et seq.</i></li></ul></li>
+<li>Arabs,
+<ul><li> homosexuality among, <a href='#2_Page_207'>207</a>.</li></ul></li>
+<li>Artistic aptitudes of inverts, <a href='#2_Page_293'>293</a>.</li>
+<li>Association therapy, <a href='#2_Page_330'>330</a>.</li>
+<li>Australia, <a href='#2_Page_21'>21</a>.</li>
+<li>Austrian law, <a href='#2_Page_348'>348</a>.</li>
+<li>Autobiographies,
+<ul><li> homosexual, <a href='#2_Page_89'>89</a>, <a href='#2_Page_287'>287</a>, <a href='#2_Page_294'>294</a>, <a href='#2_Page_295'>295</a>.</li></ul></li>
+<li>Auto-erotism, <a href='#2_Page_276'>276</a>, <a href='#2_Page_277'>277</a>, <a href='#2_Page_279'>279</a>, <a href='#2_Page_304'>304</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul>
+<li>Bacon, Lord, <a href='#2_Page_43'>43</a>.</li>
+<li>Bali,
+<ul><li> homosexuality among women in, <a href='#2_Page_206'>206</a>.</li></ul></li>
+<li>Barnfield, <a href='#2_Page_42'>42</a>.</li>
+<li>Bastille,
+<ul><li> inverts in the, <a href='#2_Page_37'>37</a>.</li></ul></li>
+<li>Bazzi, <a href='#2_Page_33'>33</a>.</li>
+<li>Bearded women, <a href='#2_Page_251'>251</a>.</li>
+<li>Berlin, <a href='#2_Page_60'>60</a>.</li>
+<li>Birds,
+<ul><li> homosexuality among, <a href='#2_Page_6'>6</a>.</li></ul></li>
+<li>Bisexual, the term, <a href='#2_Page_4'>4</a>.</li>
+<li>Bisexuality, <a href='#2_Page_87'>87</a>, <a href='#2_Page_278'>278</a>, <a href='#2_Page_310'>310</a>.</li>
+<li>Blackmailing, <a href='#2_Page_86'>86</a>, <a href='#2_Page_353'>353</a>.</li>
+<li>Blavatsky, Madame, <a href='#2_Page_197'>197</a>.</li>
+<li>Bonheur, Rosa, <a href='#2_Page_197'>197</a>.</li>
+<li><i>Bot&eacute;</i>, <a href='#2_Page_17'>17</a>.</li>
+<li>Brazil,
+<ul><li> homosexuality in, <a href='#2_Page_205'>205</a>.</li></ul></li>
+<li>Buggery,
+<ul><li> the term, <a href='#2_Page_3'>3</a>.</li></ul></li>
+<li><i>Burdash</i>, <a href='#2_Page_17'>17</a>.</li>
+<li>Byron, <a href='#2_Page_47'>47</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul>
+<li>Castration, <a href='#2_Page_327'>327</a>.</li>
+<li>Cellini, <a href='#2_Page_34'>34</a>.</li>
+<li>Charke, Charlotte, <a href='#2_Page_245'>245</a>.</li>
+<li>Chastity,
+<ul><li> the ideal of, <a href='#2_Page_341'>341</a>.</li></ul></li>
+<li>Christina of Sweden, <a href='#2_Page_196'>196</a>.</li>
+<li>Classification of the homosexual, <a href='#2_Page_82'>82</a>.</li>
+<li>Clitoris in inverted women, <a href='#2_Page_256'>256</a>, <a href='#2_Page_258'>258</a>.</li>
+<li>Clothes,
+<ul><li> inverted women in men's, <a href='#2_Page_245'>245</a> <i>et seq.</i></li></ul></li>
+<li><i>Code Napol&eacute;on</i>, <a href='#2_Page_347'>347</a>.</li>
+<li>Coeducation, <a href='#2_Page_326'>326</a>.</li>
+<li>Color-blindness compared to inversion, <a href='#2_Page_317'>317</a>.</li>
+<li>Congenital inversion, <a href='#2_Page_82'>82</a>, <a href='#2_Page_300'>300</a>.</li>
+<li>Contrary sexual feeling, the term, <a href='#2_Page_65'>65</a>.</li>
+<li>Convents,
+<ul><li> homosexuality in, <a href='#2_Page_212'>212</a>.</li></ul></li>
+<li>Costume, <a href='#2_Page_245'>245</a>, <a href='#2_Page_299'>299</a>.</li>
+<li>Creoles,
+<ul><li> homosexuality among, <a href='#2_Page_207'>207</a>.</li></ul></li>
+<li>Criminals,
+<ul><li> homosexuality among, <a href='#2_Page_23'>23</a>, <a href='#2_Page_25'>25</a>, <a href='#2_Page_200'>200</a>, <a href='#2_Page_209'>209</a>.</li></ul></li>
+<li>Cross-dressing, <a href='#2_Page_245'>245</a>.</li>
+<li><i>Cudinas</i>, <a href='#2_Page_17'>17</a>.</li>
+<li><i>Cunnilinctus</i>, <a href='#2_Page_207'>207</a>, <a href='#2_Page_258'>258</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul>
+<li>Dadon, <a href='#2_Page_36'>36</a>.</li>
+<li>Degeneration and inversion, <a href='#2_Page_312'>312</a>, <a href='#2_Page_320'>320</a>.</li>
+<li>Disease and abnormality, difference between, <a href='#2_Page_319'>319</a>.</li>
+<li>Dolben, <a href='#2_Page_48'>48</a>.</li>
+<li>Dorians, <a href='#2_Page_11'>11</a>.</li>
+<li>Dramatic aptitude and inversion, <a href='#2_Page_287'>287</a>, <a href='#2_Page_295'>295</a>.</li>
+<li>Dreams,
+<ul><li> erotic, <a href='#2_Page_279'>279</a> <i>et seq.</i></li></ul></li>
+<li>Duquesnoy, <a href='#2_Page_34'>34</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul>
+<li>Egypt,
+<ul><li> homosexuality in ancient, <a href='#2_Page_9'>9</a>;</li>
+<li> modern, <a href='#2_Page_207'>207</a>.</li></ul></li>
+<li>England,
+<ul><li> homosexuality in, <a href='#2_Page_62'>62</a>, <a href='#2_Page_261'>261</a>.</li></ul></li>
+<li>English law and homosexuality, <a href='#2_Page_349'>349</a>.</li>
+<li>Eonism, <a href='#2_Page_315'>315</a>.</li>
+<li>Erasmus, <a href='#2_Page_31'>31</a>.</li>
+<li>Erotic dreams, <a href='#2_Page_279'>279</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+<li>Eskimo, <a href='#2_Page_16'>16</a>.</li>
+<li>Eunuchoidism, <a href='#2_Page_315'>315</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul>
+<li>Factories,
+<ul><li> homosexuality among women in, <a href='#2_Page_213'>213</a> <i>et seq.</i></li></ul></li>
+<li><i>Fellatio</i>, <a href='#2_Page_282'>282</a>, <a href='#2_Page_299'>299</a>.</li>
+<li>Feminine characteristics of inverts, <a href='#2_Page_287'>287</a>.</li>
+<li>Fetichism,
+<ul><li> erotic, <a href='#2_Page_259'>259</a>.</li></ul></li>
+<li>Fitzgerald, Edward, <a href='#2_Page_50'>50</a>.</li>
+<li>France,
+<ul><li> homosexuality in, <a href='#2_Page_35'>35</a>, <a href='#2_Page_62'>62</a>, <a href='#2_Page_347'>347</a>, <a href='#2_Page_351'>351</a>.</li></ul></li>
+<li>Freudianism, <a href='#2_Page_304'>304</a>.<a name='2_Page_390'></a></li>
+<li>Friendship, <a href='#2_Page_339'>339</a>, <a href='#2_Page_368'>368</a>.</li>
+<li>Frith, Mary, <a href='#2_Page_245'>245</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul>
+<li>Genital organs and inversion, <a href='#2_Page_256'>256</a>, <a href='#2_Page_258'>258</a>, <a href='#2_Page_289'>289</a>.</li>
+<li>Genius,
+<ul><li> homosexuality among men of, <a href='#2_Page_26'>26</a>.</li></ul></li>
+<li>Germany,
+<ul><li> homosexuality in, <a href='#2_Page_37'>37</a>, <a href='#2_Page_61'>61</a>;</li>
+<li> law in relation to homosexuality in, <a href='#2_Page_38'>38</a>, <a href='#2_Page_348'>348</a>.</li></ul></li>
+<li>Gleim, <a href='#2_Page_38'>38</a>.</li>
+<li>Goethe, <a href='#2_Page_48'>48</a>.</li>
+<li>Greece,
+<ul><li> homosexuality in ancient, <a href='#2_Page_11'>11</a>, <a href='#2_Page_58'>58</a>, <a href='#2_Page_197'>197</a>, <a href='#2_Page_287'>287</a>.</li></ul></li>
+<li>Green,
+<ul><li> inverts, preference for, <a href='#2_Page_299'>299</a>.</li></ul></li>
+<li>Gynandromorphism, <a href='#2_Page_315'>315</a>.</li>
+<li>Gynecomasty, <a href='#2_Page_290'>290</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul>
+<li>Hair on body, <a href='#2_Page_252'>252</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+<li>Hall, Murray, <a href='#2_Page_246'>246</a>.</li>
+<li>Handwriting, <a href='#2_Page_290'>290</a>.</li>
+<li>Harems,
+<ul><li> homosexuality in, <a href='#2_Page_207'>207</a>.</li></ul></li>
+<li>Hatschepsu, Queen, <a href='#2_Page_196'>196</a>.</li>
+<li>Health of inverts, general, <a href='#2_Page_265'>265</a>.</li>
+<li>Heliogabalus, <a href='#2_Page_25'>25</a>.</li>
+<li>Heredity in inversion, <a href='#2_Page_264'>264</a>, <a href='#2_Page_306'>306</a>.</li>
+<li>Heresy and homosexuality, <a href='#2_Page_30'>30</a>, <a href='#2_Page_347'>347</a>.</li>
+<li>Hermaphroditism, <a href='#2_Page_313'>313</a>, <a href='#2_Page_315'>315</a>.</li>
+<li>Hobart, Miss, <a href='#2_Page_261'>261</a>.</li>
+<li>Homogenic,
+<ul><li> the term, <a href='#2_Page_2'>2</a>.</li></ul></li>
+<li>Homosexuality,
+<ul><li> the term, <a href='#2_Page_2'>2</a>, <a href='#2_Page_4'>4</a>.</li></ul></li>
+<li>Hormones, <a href='#2_Page_316'>316</a>.</li>
+<li><i>Horror femin&aelig;</i>, <a href='#2_Page_279'>279</a>, <a href='#2_Page_307'>307</a>.</li>
+<li>H&ouml;ssli, <a href='#2_Page_66'>66</a>.</li>
+<li>Humboldt, A. and W., von, <a href='#2_Page_39'>39</a>.</li>
+<li>Hygiene of homosexuality, <a href='#2_Page_332'>332</a>, <a href='#2_Page_338'>338</a>.</li>
+<li>Hyperesthesia of inverts, sexual, <a href='#2_Page_268'>268</a>.</li>
+<li>Hypertrichosis, <a href='#2_Page_252'>252</a>, <a href='#2_Page_290'>290</a>.</li>
+<li>Hypnotism in treatment of homosexuality, <a href='#2_Page_328'>328</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul>
+<li>India,
+<ul><li> homosexuality in, <a href='#2_Page_15'>15</a>, <a href='#2_Page_208'>208</a>.</li></ul></li>
+<li>Indians,
+<ul><li> homosexuality among American, <a href='#2_Page_17'>17</a>, <a href='#2_Page_205'>205</a>.</li></ul></li>
+<li>Infantilism in inverts, <a href='#2_Page_254'>254</a>, <a href='#2_Page_290'>290</a>, <a href='#2_Page_291'>291</a>.</li>
+<li>Insanity and inversion, <a href='#2_Page_266'>266</a>, <a href='#2_Page_332'>332</a>.</li>
+<li>Insects,
+<ul><li> homosexuality among, <a href='#2_Page_5'>5</a>.</li></ul></li>
+<li>Internal secretions, <a href='#2_Page_254'>254</a>, <a href='#2_Page_316'>316</a>.</li>
+<li>Inversion,
+<ul><li> the term, <a href='#2_Page_3'>3</a>.</li></ul></li>
+<li>Italy,
+<ul><li> homosexuality in, <a href='#2_Page_213'>213</a>;</li>
+<li> law in, <a href='#2_Page_348'>348</a>.</li></ul></li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul>
+<li>James I, <a href='#2_Page_40'>40</a>.</li>
+<li>Julius C&aelig;sar, <a href='#2_Page_24'>24</a>.</li>
+<li>Justinian's enactments, <a href='#2_Page_346'>346</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul>
+<li>Kleist, <a href='#2_Page_39'>39</a>.</li>
+<li>Krupp, F. A., <a href='#2_Page_39'>39</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul>
+<li>Larynx in inverted women, <a href='#2_Page_255'>255</a>.</li>
+<li>Law in relation to homosexuality, <a href='#2_Page_41'>41</a>, <a href='#2_Page_346'>346</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+<li>Lefthandedness, <a href='#2_Page_290'>290</a>.</li>
+<li>Lesbianism, <a href='#2_Page_258'>258</a>.</li>
+<li>Lincken, Catharina, <a href='#2_Page_195'>195</a>.</li>
+<li>London,
+<ul><li> homosexuality in, <a href='#2_Page_62'>62</a>.</li></ul></li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul>
+<li>Madagascar,
+<ul><li> homosexuality in, <a href='#2_Page_19'>19</a>.</li></ul></li>
+<li><i>Mahoos</i>, <a href='#2_Page_18'>18</a>.</li>
+<li>Marlowe, <a href='#2_Page_43'>43</a>.</li>
+<li>Marriage of inverts, <a href='#2_Page_260'>260</a>, <a href='#2_Page_334'>334</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+<li>Masculine protest, <a href='#2_Page_85'>85</a>.</li>
+<li>Masochism in inverted women, <a href='#2_Page_259'>259</a>.</li>
+<li>Masturbation, <a href='#2_Page_276'>276</a>.</li>
+<li>Maupin, Madame, <a href='#2_Page_199'>199</a>.</li>
+<li>Medico-legal aspects of homosexuality, <a href='#2_Page_200'>200</a>.</li>
+<li>Michel, Louise, <a href='#2_Page_197'>197</a>.</li>
+<li>Michelangelo, <a href='#2_Page_32'>32</a>.</li>
+<li>Mihiri, <a href='#2_Page_207'>207</a>.</li>
+<li><i>Mika</i> operation, <a href='#2_Page_21'>21</a>.</li>
+<li>Mitchell, Alice, <a href='#2_Page_201'>201</a>.</li>
+<li>Molly houses, <a href='#2_Page_46'>46</a>.</li>
+<li>Monkeys,
+<ul><li> homosexuality among, <a href='#2_Page_6'>6</a>.</li></ul></li>
+<li>Moral attitude of inverts, <a href='#2_Page_86'>86</a>, <a href='#2_Page_300'>300</a>, <a href='#2_Page_353'>353</a>.</li>
+<li>Moral leaders,
+<ul><li> inversion in, <a href='#2_Page_29'>29</a>, <a href='#2_Page_197'>197</a>.</li></ul></li>
+<li><i>Mujerados</i>, <a href='#2_Page_17'>17</a>.</li>
+<li>Muret, <a href='#2_Page_30'>30</a>.</li>
+<li>Musculature, <a href='#2_Page_255'>255</a>.</li>
+<li>Music, <a href='#2_Page_295'>295</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul>
+<li>Narcissism, <a href='#2_Page_304'>304</a>.</li>
+<li>Neurasthenia and inversion, <a href='#2_Page_332'>332</a>.</li>
+<li>New Caledonia,
+<ul><li> homosexuality in, <a href='#2_Page_10'>10</a>.</li></ul></li>
+<li>New Guinea,
+<ul><li> homosexuality in, <a href='#2_Page_20'>20</a>.</li></ul></li>
+<li>New Zealand,
+<ul><li> homosexuality among women in, <a href='#2_Page_205'>205</a>.</li></ul></li>
+<li>Normans, <a href='#2_Page_9'>9</a>, <a href='#2_Page_40'>40</a>.</li>
+<li>Nosology and pathology, <a href='#2_Page_319'>319</a>.</li>
+<li>Novels,
+<ul><li> homosexual, <a href='#2_Page_199'>199</a>, <a href='#2_Page_340'>340</a>.</li></ul></li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul>
+<li>&OElig;dipus complex, <a href='#2_Page_306'>306</a>.</li>
+<li>Oligotrichosis, <a href='#2_Page_251'>251</a>, <a href='#2_Page_290'>290</a>.</li>
+<li>Ovaries, <a href='#2_Page_254'>254</a>, <a href='#2_Page_256'>256</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul>
+<li><i>Paiderastia</i>, <a href='#2_Page_11'>11</a>, <a href='#2_Page_283'>283</a>.</li>
+<li>Partridges,
+<ul><li> homosexuality in, <a href='#2_Page_4'>4</a>.</li></ul></li>
+<li>Pathology and nosology, <a href='#2_Page_319'>319</a>.<a name='2_Page_391'></a></li>
+<li><i>Pedicatio</i>, <a href='#2_Page_282'>282</a>.</li>
+<li>Persia, <a href='#2_Page_13'>13</a>, <a href='#2_Page_14'>14</a>.</li>
+<li>Phallus,
+<ul><li> use of artificial, <a href='#2_Page_195'>195</a>, <a href='#2_Page_207'>207</a>, <a href='#2_Page_208'>208</a>, <a href='#2_Page_258'>258</a>, <a href='#2_Page_259'>259</a>.</li></ul></li>
+<li>Physical abnormalities, <a href='#2_Page_289'>289</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+<li>Pigeons,
+<ul><li> inversion in, <a href='#2_Page_7'>7</a>.</li></ul></li>
+<li>Platen, <a href='#2_Page_35'>35</a>.</li>
+<li>Precocity of inverts, <a href='#2_Page_268'>268</a>.</li>
+<li>Prevalence of homosexuality, <a href='#2_Page_60'>60</a>, <a href='#2_Page_195'>195</a>.</li>
+<li>Prevention of homosexuality, <a href='#2_Page_325'>325</a>.</li>
+<li>Priests and inversion, <a href='#2_Page_20'>20</a>.</li>
+<li>Prisons,
+<ul><li> homosexuality in, <a href='#2_Page_25'>25</a>, <a href='#2_Page_209'>209</a>.</li></ul></li>
+<li>Prostitutes,
+<ul><li> homosexuality among, <a href='#2_Page_210'>210</a>.</li></ul></li>
+<li>Prostitution,
+<ul><li> male, <a href='#2_Page_86'>86</a>.</li></ul></li>
+<li>Pseudo-homosexuality, <a href='#2_Page_83'>83</a>.</li>
+<li>Pseudo-sexual attraction, <a href='#2_Page_283'>283</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+<li>Psycho-analysis, <a href='#2_Page_90'>90</a>, <a href='#2_Page_305'>305</a>, <a href='#2_Page_330'>330</a>.</li>
+<li>Psycho-sexual hermaphroditism, <a href='#2_Page_4'>4</a>;
+<ul><li> <i>and see</i> Bisexuality.</li></ul></li>
+<li>Psycho-therapeutics, <a href='#2_Page_328'>328</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul>
+<li>Race and inversion, <a href='#2_Page_264'>264</a>.</li>
+<li>Rats,
+<ul><li> homosexuality among, <a href='#2_Page_5'>5</a>.</li></ul></li>
+<li>Raylan, N. de, <a href='#2_Page_248'>248</a>.</li>
+<li>Red,
+<ul><li> invert's preference for, <a href='#2_Page_299'>299</a>.</li></ul></li>
+<li>Renaissance and inversion, the, <a href='#2_Page_30'>30</a>.</li>
+<li>Retarded inversion, <a href='#2_Page_84'>84</a>.</li>
+<li>Rome,
+<ul><li> homosexuality in ancient, <a href='#2_Page_24'>24</a>.</li></ul></li>
+<li>Russian law, <a href='#2_Page_349'>349</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul>
+<li>Sadism in inverted women, <a href='#2_Page_259'>259</a>.</li>
+<li>Sakaltaves,
+<ul><li> homosexuality among, <a href='#2_Page_19'>19</a>.</li></ul></li>
+<li>Sappho, <a href='#2_Page_197'>197</a>.</li>
+<li>Sapphism, <a href='#2_Page_258'>258</a>.</li>
+<li>Savages,
+<ul><li> homosexuality among, <a href='#2_Page_9'>9</a> <i>et seq.</i></li></ul></li>
+<li>Schools and homosexuality, <a href='#2_Page_75'>75</a> <i>et seq.</i>;
+<ul><li> <a href='#2_Page_216'>216</a>, <a href='#2_Page_218'>218</a>, <a href='#2_Page_261'>261</a>, <a href='#2_Page_322'>322</a>, <a href='#2_Page_325'>325</a>, <a href='#2_Page_368'>368</a> <i>et seq.</i></li></ul></li>
+<li><i>Schopans</i>, <a href='#2_Page_16'>16</a>.</li>
+<li><i>Seoatra</i>, <a href='#2_Page_19'>19</a>.</li>
+<li>Secondary sexual-characters and inversion, <a href='#2_Page_8'>8</a>, <a href='#2_Page_313'>313</a>.</li>
+<li>Seduction and inversion, <a href='#2_Page_271'>271</a>, <a href='#2_Page_322'>322</a>.</li>
+<li>Senile homosexuality, <a href='#2_Page_85'>85</a>.</li>
+<li>Sex,
+<ul><li> the theory of, <a href='#2_Page_79'>79</a>.</li></ul></li>
+<li>Sexo-esthetic inversion, <a href='#2_Page_315'>315</a>.</li>
+<li>Sexual organs, <a href='#2_Page_256'>256</a>.</li>
+<li>Sexual precocity of inverts, <a href='#2_Page_268'>268</a>.</li>
+<li>Shakespeare, <a href='#2_Page_43'>43</a>.</li>
+<li>Society and inversion, <a href='#2_Page_343'>343</a>.</li>
+<li>Sodoma, <a href='#2_Page_33'>33</a>.</li>
+<li>Sodomy,
+<ul><li> the term, <a href='#2_Page_3'>3</a>.</li></ul></li>
+<li>Soldiers,
+<ul><li> homosexuality among, <a href='#2_Page_21'>21</a>.</li></ul></li>
+<li>Sotadic zone,
+<ul><li> Burton's, <a href='#2_Page_58'>58</a>.</li></ul></li>
+<li>Spain,
+<ul><li> homosexuality among women in, <a href='#2_Page_209'>209</a>, <a href='#2_Page_214'>214</a>.</li></ul></li>
+<li>Spurious homosexuality, <a href='#2_Page_86'>86</a>.</li>
+<li>Suicide and inversion, <a href='#2_Page_202'>202</a>.</li>
+<li>Suggestion as an exciting cause of inversion, <a href='#2_Page_269'>269</a> <i>et seq.</i> <a href='#2_Page_303'>303</a>.</li>
+<li>Switzerland,
+<ul><li> law in, <a href='#2_Page_348'>348</a>.</li></ul></li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul>
+<li>Tahiti, <a href='#2_Page_18'>18</a>.</li>
+<li>Tarn, Pauline, <a href='#2_Page_200'>200</a>.</li>
+<li>Tasso, <a href='#2_Page_31'>31</a>.</li>
+<li>Templars, <a href='#2_Page_36'>36</a>.</li>
+<li>Theaters and homosexuality, <a href='#2_Page_215'>215</a>, <a href='#2_Page_287'>287</a>.</li>
+<li>Tramps,
+<ul><li> homosexuality among, <a href='#2_Page_26'>26</a>, <a href='#2_Page_359'>359</a>.</li></ul></li>
+<li>Transvestism, <a href='#2_Page_244'>244</a>, <a href='#2_Page_315'>315</a>.</li>
+<li>Treatment of inversion, <a href='#2_Page_327'>327</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+<li>Tribadism, <a href='#2_Page_206'>206</a>, <a href='#2_Page_208'>208</a>, <a href='#2_Page_257'>257</a>.</li>
+<li>Turkey,
+<ul><li> homosexuality in, <a href='#2_Page_13'>13</a>, <a href='#2_Page_207'>207</a>.</li></ul></li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul>
+<li>Udall, <a href='#2_Page_41'>41</a>.</li>
+<li>Ulrichs, <a href='#2_Page_67'>67</a>.</li>
+<li>Undifferentiated sex stage in youth, <a href='#2_Page_79'>79</a>, <a href='#2_Page_216'>216</a>.</li>
+<li>United States,
+<ul><li> homosexuality in, <a href='#2_Page_63'>63</a>, <a href='#2_Page_261'>261</a>, <a href='#2_Page_351'>351</a>.</li></ul></li>
+<li>Uranism,
+<ul><li> the term, <a href='#2_Page_2'>2</a>.</li></ul></li>
+<li>Urning,
+<ul><li> the term, <a href='#2_Page_2'>2</a>, <a href='#2_Page_68'>68</a>.</li></ul></li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul>
+<li>Vanity of inverts, <a href='#2_Page_297'>297</a>.</li>
+<li>Vasectomy, <a href='#2_Page_327'>327</a>.</li>
+<li>Vay, Sarolta, <a href='#2_Page_195'>195</a>.</li>
+<li>Verlaine, <a href='#2_Page_57'>57</a>.</li>
+<li>Vinci, L. da, <a href='#2_Page_32'>32</a>.</li>
+<li>Virgil, <a href='#2_Page_27'>27</a>.</li>
+<li>Vivien, Ren&eacute;e, <a href='#2_Page_200'>200</a>.</li>
+<li>Voice in inversion, <a href='#2_Page_255'>255</a>, <a href='#2_Page_290'>290</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul>
+<li>War and homosexuality, <a href='#2_Page_9'>9</a>.</li>
+<li>Whisky and inversion, <a href='#2_Page_256'>256</a>, <a href='#2_Page_291'>291</a>.</li>
+<li>Whitman, Walt, <a href='#2_Page_51'>51</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+<li>Wilde, Oscar, <a href='#2_Page_48'>48</a>, <a href='#2_Page_63'>63</a>, <a href='#2_Page_352'>352</a>.</li>
+<li>William III, <a href='#2_Page_40'>40</a>.</li>
+<li>William Rufus, <a href='#2_Page_40'>40</a>.</li>
+<li>Winkelmann, <a href='#2_Page_34'>34</a>.</li>
+<li>Women movement and homosexuality, <a href='#2_Page_262'>262</a>.</li>
+<li>Working classes,
+<ul><li> homosexuality in, <a href='#2_Page_22'>22</a>, <a href='#2_Page_213'>213</a>.</li></ul></li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul>
+<li>Zanzibar,
+<ul><li> homosexuality in, <a href='#2_Page_19'>19</a>, 206, 259.</li></ul></li>
+</ul>
+
+<div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 13611 ***</div>
+</body>
+</html>