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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #54713 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/54713)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of A Treatise on the Diseases Produced By
-Onanism, Masturbation, Self-Pollution,, by Léopold Deslandes
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: A Treatise on the Diseases Produced By Onanism, Masturbation, Self-Pollution, and other excesses.
-
-Author: Léopold Deslandes
-
-Release Date: May 13, 2017 [EBook #54713]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A TREATISE ON THE DISEASES ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by deaurider, Wayne Hammond and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- A
-
- TREATISE ON THE DISEASES
-
- PRODUCED BY
-
- ONANISM, MASTURBATION,
- SELF-POLLUTION,
-
- AND OTHER EXCESSES.
-
- BY
-
- L. DESLANDES, M. D.,
-
- MEMBER OF THE ROYAL ACADEMY OF MEDICINE AT PARIS,
- AND OTHER LEARNED SOCIETIES.
-
- TRANSLATED FROM THE FRENCH,
-
- WITH MANY ADDITIONS.
-
- Second Edition.
-
- BOSTON:
-
- OTIS, BROADERS, AND COMPANY.
- 1839.
-
-
-
-
- Entered, according to an Act of Congress, in the year 1838, by
-
- OTIS, BROADERS & COMPANY,
-
- In the Clerk’s Office of the District Court of Massachusetts.
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE.
-
-
-To those who would complain of the publication of a work upon the
-delicate subject to which the following pages refer, we would remark,
-that the evil here depicted, is one of great magnitude. This cause
-of disease is often entirely overlooked even by medical men, either
-from false notions of delicacy, or because their attention has not
-been drawn by fearful experience to cases which are ascribable merely
-to onanism. The patient is unconscious of his danger, and perseveres
-in his vicious habit--the physician treats him symptomatically, and
-death soon closes the scene. “Many a young man,” remarked a physician,
-who had seen much of disease from this cause, “many a one has come to
-me, totally unconscious that his criminal act was sapping to the very
-foundation his health and strength.”
-
-To call the attention of medical men to this source of disease, and to
-point out to such persons not of the profession as may meet with this
-book, and who indulge in this habit, the fatal precipice to which they
-wend their way, has been the object of publishing it here. How very
-many cases of consumption, that disease which annually destroys its
-thousands, could, if the truth were known, be referred to this cause!
-How many minds have been ruined by self-indulgence!
-
-If any apology were needed for this publication, it may be found in the
-last annual report of the State Lunatic Asylum of Massachusetts, which
-states that of the number of insane received at that institution during
-the last year, no less than THIRTY-TWO lost their senses from this
-cause.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS.
-
-
- PART I.
-
- EFFECTS OF VENEREAL EXCESSES.
-
- CHAPTER 1. DANGER ATTENDING VENEREAL EXCESSES.
-
- § 1. Power of the genital organs when at rest.
-
- § 2. Power of the genital organs when excited.
-
- § 3. Power of the genital organs when in action.
-
- CHAPTER 2. CIRCUMSTANCES WHICH RENDER THE ACT
- OF VENERY MORE OR LESS INJURIOUS TO THE CONSTITUTION
- AND TO THE HEALTH.
-
- § 1. Circumstances connected with the act of venery
- which render it more or less injurious.
-
- § 2. Circumstances foreign to the act of venery
- which render it more or less injurious.
-
- § 3. Influence which the general state of the functions
- at different AGES and the particular state of
- some of them at different periods of life, may have
- on the consequences of the act of venery.
-
- CHAPTER 3. SYMPTOMS AND DISEASES RESULTING FROM
- VENEREAL EXCESSES.
-
- § 1. General symptoms of venereal excesses.
-
- § 2. Diseases resulting from venereal excesses.
-
- PART II.
-
- RULES OF PRESERVATION AND TREATMENT
- RELATIVE TO VENEREAL EXCESSES.
-
- CHAPTER 1. MEANS OF PRESERVATION WITH REFERENCE
- TO VENEREAL EXCESSES.
-
- § 1. First indication. To prevent the desire of onanism.
-
- § 2. Second indication. To resist the desire of onanism.
-
- § 3. Third indication. To take away from those
- who wish to masturbate the power of doing so.
-
- CHAPTER 2. MODE OF REPAIRING THE INJURY ARISING
- FROM VENEREAL EXCESSES.
-
-
-
-
-OF
-
-ONANISM
-
-AND
-
-OTHER ABUSES.
-
-
-
-
-PART FIRST.
-
-EFFECTS OF EXCESS IN VENERY.
-
-
-Can the power possessed by man of indulging in the act of venery be
-abused? or, in other words, can any injury arise to the health or
-constitution, by indulgence in this act. It is sufficient to observe,
-that the affirmative has never been doubted by any author, that no
-medical man has ever been found at any time, or in any country,
-so deficient in intelligence as to doubt that venereal enjoyments
-were attended by venereal excess, and no one has ever disputed that
-masturbation or coition may be injurious.
-
-The act of venery, then, may be followed by bad effects. But is it
-so, and to what extent? This question is the only one which has been
-debated, the only one to be debated. Let then those, who think that
-venereal indulgences are followed only by the remembrance of them,
-know, that deceived by their desires, and perhaps by their necessities,
-they are rushing blindly toward a fatal precipice, which is to be sure
-at a greater or less distance from them, but which however exists, and
-to which those who do not take warning will arrive more quickly.
-
-It is generally thought that venereal excesses, particularly those of
-masturbation, contribute in a considerable proportion to the ills of
-suffering humanity. Some even consider this cause of disease, as one
-of the most fatal and active. “In my opinion,” says Réveillé-Parise,
-“neither the plague, nor war, nor small-pox, nor similar diseases, have
-produced results so disastrous to humanity as the pernicious habit of
-onanism: it is the destroying element of civilized societies, which
-is constantly in action, and gradually undermines the health of a
-nation.” (_Revue Medicale, April_, 1828, p. 93.) No one has disputed
-the dangers of this kind of excess. Many authors, however, have
-thought, that writers had exaggerated on this subject. Thus Montègre
-says that “the bad consequences (although they do exist) attending
-premature indulgences have _sometimes_ been exaggerated.” (_Dict. des
-sc. med._ vol. vi. p. 100.) Georget’s opinion is similar. According to
-him, (_Physiologie du système nerveux_ vol. i.) most authors and Tissot
-among others have much exaggerated the effects of masturbation.
-
-It will be seen, with how much reserve these authors speak. The injury
-arising from this habit, say they, is very great, but it has been
-overrated. Let us now examine upon what grounds they and others have
-been led to consider these fears as too great: we shall see by what
-reasoning they have been governed, and if they are correct.
-
-Montègre was struck by the instances of individuals who were addicted
-to onanism from early childhood, and who, however, in the prime of
-vigour and health, had attained an age to which men do not generally
-arrive, or to whom advanced age comes loaded with troubles. But do
-we not see old soldiers who have always escaped bullets? Now what do
-these facts prove except that such individuals exist? It has also
-been stated, that influenced with what they have read in books, which
-contain the most formidable cases, as those only are printed, many
-physicians have attributed too much importance to the diseases caused
-by onanism. But admitting this, may we not conclude also, that many
-severe affections which it produces are not referred to it? That in
-attending cases of dorsal consumption, epilepsy, paralysis, loss of
-sight, &c., less dangerous diseases are overlooked, and that their
-origin is not suspected? How often, for instance, are we ignorant of
-the true cause of these affections whose characters are constantly
-changing, which are seen every day, which at first produce uneasiness,
-but with which one soon becomes familiar; which are not the symptoms
-of a disease having its name and place among other diseases, so much
-as the indication of constitutional affections, which appear from a
-variety of influences, and are referred to each one of them. And yet
-this kind of affection, as we shall state hereafter, is that presented
-most frequently by individuals addicted but for a short time to
-onanism, who indulge in it but seldom, or whose constitution resists
-this kind of excess.
-
-Appeal has been made also to direct observation; the number of those
-who have fallen victims to onanism has been cited. It has been said,
-call to mind every thing which has occurred to you in the course of a
-long practice, you will doubtless find deplorable and even numerous
-instances of the diseases attending onanism; but does this number
-approximate that of the individuals who abandon themselves to this
-vice? There are few persons who are not addicted to masturbation; very
-well, are there many whose constitutions are impaired and whose health
-is destroyed? It is admitted that premature and too frequent and too
-often repeated indulgences may injure and sometimes have caused great
-detriment, yet those who live through them are very numerous, and the
-distance between the use and abuse of the act of venery, is greater
-than is generally admitted.
-
-This manner of counting the dead and wounded has something specious
-in it, but it is defective in this respect, that it takes no account
-of what has escaped observation, and cannot be estimated. Every
-practitioner has undoubtedly seen more cases of masturbation than
-he has seen victims to this habit. But how many circumstances have
-prevented him from seeing all the diseases which are caused by this
-habit, or have prevented him from referring these diseases to their
-true cause? We have already mentioned the influence which his previous
-reading and occupation have on this subject; to this cause of errour,
-we may add others. How numerous are the affections which are borne
-in silence and which never come under the notice of a physician. How
-numerous too the practitioners who avoid the trouble of referring to
-the immediate or remote causes of the diseases which are observed by
-them, and who confine themselves simply to their treatment, without
-tracing them to their source. How often too are diseases resulting
-from onanism attributed to causes with which they have no connexion,
-to causes which were indicated by persons who knew no better, or even
-by the patient who believed himself to be interested in giving wrong
-statements. How frequently also does the practitioner exclude himself
-from obtaining information, by abstaining from making suggestions
-to the parents, which all hear with displeasure, and repel with
-indignation. How often, also, does he refrain from asking necessary
-questions, for fear of wounding the modesty of the young patient, of
-teaching him a thing of which perhaps he is ignorant, or at least of
-exciting in him a dangerous curiosity! Finally how frequently are his
-doubts removed by the art with which those who indulge in onanism, even
-when young, know how to conceal a habit at which they blush in secret.
-Now is it reasonable to expect, that the physician when surrounded
-by so many causes of errour, should go into statistical details and
-estimate from them the sum total of the ills produced by onanism and
-other excesses of a similar character? This method would undoubtedly
-lead to taking a part for the whole and consequently to forming too
-narrow an opinion of the evil. Many authors having followed this
-course, and having considered the evils which are unobserved by them
-as only imaginary, have not denied the dangers and inconveniences of
-venereal excesses, but have supposed that they exist less frequently
-than is really the case.
-
-I do not wish to call in question the utility of observations, or
-to pretend that they must be neglected. I only wish to say that in
-attaching to them too much consequence we are led to false conclusions
-which may inspire a dangerous security. The physician who commits this
-fault, reasons as does the onanist, who being unable to distinguish,
-either in his comrades or in himself, the effects of his pernicious
-habit, concludes that it is an innocent practice and that it may be
-indulged in unreservedly. The principal utility of observing the
-diseases caused by masturbation is to determine _what are the maladies
-produced by onanism and what is the relative frequency of each of
-them_. We can also certainly form an opinion, from that which is
-shown by observation, in regard to that which escapes us. But it is
-only by induction, that the extent of the evils caused by venereal
-abuses can be estimated. The bad effects produced by these abuses,
-can be estimated only by considering what they may produce. It is
-only after studying the genital system in its relations with other
-organs, and considering the influence it exercises upon them, that we
-can pronounce in regard to the maladies and infirmities and dangers
-of all kinds which attend the abuse of the genital system. We proceed
-to this subject first. We shall then state what is known from direct
-observation in regard to the different affections which result from
-venereal excesses.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-OF THE DANGERS WHICH MAY FOLLOW VENEREAL EXCESS.
-
-
-To abuse oneself by onanism, by coition, is to abuse the organs which
-serve for the execution of these acts. The genital organs in the
-female are, the vulva, clitoris, vagina, uterus, fallopian tubes and
-ovaries. Those in the male are the penis, the seminal passages and
-the testicles. These organs are then placed in such a state that they
-become a source of disorder and of disease to the rest of the body.
-Now, what is their power in this respect? Can they do much injury?
-This is the question now to be examined.
-
-The injury which the genital organs can do to the rest of the body
-when they are abused, is the natural consequence of the influence
-exercised when they are not abused! This injury is in a direct ratio
-with this influence; it is by this then that it must be measured. In
-fact, it is clear that if the different organs have in the ordinary
-state different degrees of power, they must, when they do injury,
-exercise it in different degrees. Let us then attempt to estimate the
-influence possessed by the genital organs. If it be demonstrated that
-when these organs are in a state of rest, of excitement, or in use,
-their influence on the other functions is considerable, some opinion
-may be formed as to what may be their influence when abused. It must
-be admitted that organs, which have a powerful effect on all parts of
-the body, which regulate all the others, which cannot feel, act, and
-perform their functions without the others taking part in what takes
-place in them, it must be admitted I say, that when such organs are
-made instruments of disorder, the bad consequences which follow may be
-very great.
-
-The genital organs may be observed in three states; the first state is
-that of _rest_. They then merely live, present no special sensation and
-do not proceed to the act of venery. In the second state they become
-the seat, the focus of more or less vivid sensations, and which have
-for a special character to invite and to constrain with more or less
-power to the act of venery. In animals, this state is called _rutting_:
-in our species, it has no special name, except when existing to a very
-great degree, and then it constitutes a disease, termed _Satyriasis_
-or _nymphomania_: I shall call it the state of _excitement_. The third
-is that of _action_: it is the state in which the genital organs are,
-when they perform their special functions, when they accomplish the
-act of venery. They then do not simply live as in the first state, or
-feel as in the second; but they act, and afterward return to one of
-the preceding states, and particularly to the first: they rest. These
-are the three aspects under which we shall examine these organs. To
-render our remarks more intelligible, we will give a few definitions.
-The power of bringing the genital organs into a state of action is
-the _venereal_ power: this when put in action is the _act of venery_.
-If this act results from the concurrence of the two sexes, it is
-_coition_. If it be caused by solitary manipulation, it then receives
-divers names; the terms most used are _masturbation_, or _onanism_. The
-act of venery, whether it does or does not result from the concurrence
-of the two sexes may or may not be injurious. When it is injurious
-in any degree there is then _venereal excess, abuse of the genital
-organs_. This sense is the only one attached in this book, to this mode
-of expression: for if in a moral and religious point of view the simple
-fact of coition in some cases and of onanism in every case be a vice,
-an excess, an abuse, the physician should apply these terms only to
-cases where the health is injured.
-
-
-§ 1. INFLUENCE OF THE GENITAL ORGANS CONSIDERED IN A STATE OF REST.
-
-It might be thought that when these organs are at rest, when they are
-neither used nor abused, when the venereal sense is as it were asleep
-in them, and they seem occupied only with their own development, and
-nutrition, it might seem I say that these organs take little or no
-part in what is going on around them: but this is a mistake. We shall
-see that this dull life which then occupies them is sufficient to make
-them a powerful focus of action; that all the other organs owe to them
-a part of their mode of existence their form and substance. By this
-we can judge of what the genital system is capable, when excited, and
-when by the hand or otherwise it is brought to the highest degree of
-activity.
-
-Consider him who was born an eunuch, the man who has never had genital
-organs, whose body, mind, and heart are developed without their
-influence: compare him with other men and see in what he is deficient:
-for his physical moral and intellectual relations will of course be
-deficient in all that depends on the genital organs. This study will
-reveal to you their power, and will point out to you the difference
-between a man in whose development they have assisted, and one in whose
-development, the genital organs have taken no part.
-
-Eunuchs are very seldom tall: they are frequently short and sometimes
-very short. A woman fifty-two years old, who had no uterus, and whose
-genitals were presented to the academy of medicine by M. Renaulden,
-was only three and a half feet high. The limbs of eunuchs when they
-are not percolated with white fluids, are generally thin and badly
-developed. Their bones have neither their usual size nor form, as has
-been remarked by many observers, particularly by M. Mojon of Geneva.
-(_Alibert_, _Nouv. El. de therapeutique_, 3d edition, vol. ii., p.
-115.) This defect in growth is much more remarkable in the larynx.
-This organ which generally acquires two-thirds of its size at puberty,
-remains as in infancy, and the voice preserves that shrillness which
-it has in young people, but becomes a little stronger because the
-chest enlarges. The different tissues are not only less developed,
-but some are not developed at all. Thus in eunuchs the beard and the
-hairs on the pubis are deficient; their skin remains as free from
-hairs as in early youth. The genital organs then have a powerful
-effect on nutrition, because when they are deficient, the growth is
-defective or ceases entirely. This influence is manifested also by the
-characters presented by the different tissues after the action of the
-genital parts ceases. To understand these characters, we have only
-to compare the flesh of animals who have been castrated with that of
-those who are perfect; for example the flesh of the ox with that of
-the bull, that of the capon with that of the rooster &c. In the eunuch
-these characters are no less marked. His organization is in a measure
-stationary. When an adult, he preserves in great part the physical
-attributes of youth, and then when these are lost, those of old age,
-and not those of manhood, present themselves. It is the genital organs
-then which in a perfect man, give colour to the skin, give to the flesh
-more consistence and firmness and which gradually take up from the
-cellular tissue those white fluids, which prevent us from seeing the
-prominences of the bones and muscles. The organization of the eunuch
-is then unfinished, imperfect. The organs which should have appeared
-at the period of puberty are not seen: others acquire only a part of
-their growth: all retain a part of those characters which they ought
-properly speaking to lose and do not obtain those which belong to them.
-These facts are highly important. The study of them demonstrates the
-extent of the derangement caused by venereal excesses: for the organs
-abused by the onanist and libertine, are those which take so active and
-special a part in the internal economy of all our tissues: which stamp
-them with the seal of virility, of which the eunuch always remains
-destitute.
-
-Consider the eunuch now in his life of relation: look in him for the
-thought, activity, and sensibility of the man. In these respects
-also how much he is deficient; he is inactive, indifferent, and
-destitute of energy. The lymphatic temperament is marked in him by
-his insensibility, his apathy, no less than by the delicacy of his
-flesh, and the whiteness of his skin. He has preserved from infancy
-the disposition given by feebleness, to be excited by the least
-cause: hence he is timid and pusillanimous and cowardly. Devoid of
-any internal feeling which renders the soul gay, he is morose and
-wearisome. He is destitute of those feelings which attach man to man
-and render one capable of attachment, love, and devotion. He lives,
-he vegetates only for himself: he is a perfect egotist: if he has any
-sentiments they are those of envy or hatred: in fact they are repulsive
-sentiments: but most frequently he has none or they are very slight.
-The crimes of the eunuch come in fact less from the sentiments he has,
-than from those he has not. His mind, like his body and heart, remains
-a perfect waste. His intelligence is but moderate and he is never
-known to conceive or execute great ideas. This picture is not drawn
-from the imagination; it is the result of long continued observations
-at all periods, in all places, and upon all kinds of eunuchs. One of
-them observed by M. Bedor embodied in himself the principal features of
-this picture. He was an eunuch from birth who had become a conscript.
-His appearance was humble and languishing; his eyes were downcast and
-averted; he was very timid and cowardly, was afraid of dead bodies,
-and of darkness. He admitted that he had never been attached even to
-any member of his family: but he was also incapable of dislike. He
-was not pleased with musick, and had no idea of singing: finally he
-was insensible to all enjoyment. He did not however complain of his
-situation. His intelligence was very slight, his conversation was
-obscure and incorrect, and he was so incapable of being instructed that
-although he had lived in the barracks a year he had none of the moral
-habits of the soldier. (_Journal de med. chir. et phar._ vol. xxv. p.
-75.)
-
-Such is the eunuch. The operator in mutilating him mutilated his heart,
-his senses, his mind. The development of the moral and intellectual
-faculties then like that of the body is connected with the existence
-of the genital organs. Deprive a child of a limb of his four limbs,
-that is of the half at least of his frame, and he will continue to be
-developed, the same as if no part had been taken from him. But take
-away the testicles, and all his tissues, all his faculties will bear
-indelible marks of this mutilation. These organs alone then have much
-more power than the four extremities. It is with these, with this
-power, that the onanist trifles from childhood, without hesitation
-and without moderation. Is it necessary now to follow this train of
-reasoning to show that his course of conduct is dangerous? It is
-also to the influence exercised by the genital organs on other parts
-that the sexes owe their peculiar differences. Their organization,
-influenced by a different genital apparatus, presents a different
-mode of existence, action and sensation. Thus the sexual characters
-are slightly marked at birth, become distinct as the genital organs
-develope themselves, suddenly enlarge at the period of puberty, exist
-in the greatest degree when these parts have come to their perfect
-state, and lose their energy in old age. The destruction of the
-testicles in the male and of the ovaries in the female prevents the
-regular development, or even alters the special distinctions of sex.
-We have already seen that this destruction renders man effeminate:
-we will add that it renders the female more masculine, and gives her
-characters, which in the natural order of things belong exclusively to
-the male. This conclusion is drawn from facts which seem authentic,
-and it is strengthened too by the fact that when the activity of the
-genitals is destroyed by age, the voice becomes rough, resembling
-that of the male, the upper lip and chin are covered with hairs, the
-moral character acquires more firmness, the taste and habits are much
-modified and approximate those of the male. A similar thing occurs in
-animals according to Dumeril. (_Dict. des sc. med., art. continence_,
-p. 118.)
-
-It is not only by comparing the sexes that we see that different
-genital organs have a different action, but it follows also from
-observing those doubtful beings termed _hermaphrodites_. In these
-individuals the genital organs disturbed in their regular development,
-present doubtful appearances and belong at the same time to the two
-sexes. In these individuals the organization being influenced in
-another manner is developed differently. Faithful to these organs which
-generally impress in the body the seal of sex, the general state of the
-body becomes equivocal like them and presents a mixture in different
-proportions of the male and female attributes. Thus in a girl whose
-history is stated by Beclard, and who among other imperfections of the
-external genital organs which rendered her sex doubtful, presented a
-complete closure of the vulva, and a clitoris so much developed that
-it resembled a penis, the larynx and voice were like those of a youth:
-the upper lip, the chin and cheeks presented a white beard, long and
-coarse hairs covered the lower extremities and surrounded the anus;
-finally the proportions of the trunk and limbs and the formation of
-the pelvis resembled those of man. (_Bull. de la Faculté de med._ vol.
-iv. p. 273.) It would be easy to refer to similar facts which have
-been frequently recorded. The general state of the economy, then, is
-somewhat connected with that of the genital parts, varies like them and
-takes part in the changes which they undergo. Hence it is astonishing
-to see libertines and onanists render themselves effeminate, and
-demoralize their constitution by using these parts in such a manner as
-to fatigue and change them: and to observe women robbing themselves in
-the same manner of their beauty, the delicacy of their form and the
-charm of their voice.
-
-When man has attained his perfect development, the bonds which unite
-the genital organs to the rest of the body become less apparent and
-probably less intimate than before: they however are not destroyed.
-Castration certainly does not deprive the adult of all the characters,
-of all the faculties which had been developed by puberty: but it
-modifies them very much. The beard has been known to come out after the
-loss of the testes as if its existence were connected with theirs, as
-an effect is with its cause. The intellectual faculties particularly
-lose much of their energy, when the genital organs are removed. Those
-persons who have been mutilated not unfrequently become melancholy and
-finally commit suicide. (_Orfila, Leçons de medicine legale_, 1823, p.
-126.) A remarkable case of enervation was observed by Richerand, in
-some soldiers whose testes had been shot away in action. Among other
-cases, he mentions a soldier who had previously been celebrated for
-his activity and valor, and who, after his mutilation took an aversion
-to any violent exercise, and to gain his livelihood, applied himself
-to such labours as are carried on by females, particularly to sewing
-gloves. (_Richerand, nosographie chirurgicale_, 2nd edition, vol.
-iv. p. 292.) Compare these facts with what takes place when age, that
-great operator, extinguishes the principle of virility. When one is
-old, is he as affectionate, as sensible, as devoted, as intelligent, as
-he was in youth? do not the general characters of an eunuch gradually
-come upon him? The genital organs then, even when in repose, regulate
-in more than one respect and at every period of life, the rest of the
-human body.
-
-But it is particularly before and during puberty that these organs
-deserve the most serious attention, for then they possess the most
-power. This power commences with them, and like them increases every
-day. Thus the tastes, the characters, the inclinations, and generally
-all which distinguishes the sexes in a moral and physical point of
-view, are marked from infancy. That poverty of body of heart and
-of spirit which characterizes eunuchism, is seen in young eunuchs,
-in those for instance who are born destitute of genital organs.
-The soldier whose case is stated by Bedor, always presented that
-indifference and languor common to eunuchs; he always avoided all
-trials of skill at wrestling, running, leaping and finally all youthful
-exercises, and as we have already remarked, never exhibited attachment
-to any one, even to his parents. The influence of the sexual organs
-then commences with life. But it does not attain all its intensity
-until puberty.
-
-At this period, which in our climate commences from the twelfth to the
-sixteenth year, a little sooner in females than in males, the genital
-organs have the most vitality. Until that time they are developed
-slowly and almost imperceptibly; they suddenly increase with great
-activity, and their growth is not arrested till they have arrived at
-perfection. This is not the place to enter into details as to the
-labour which then takes place in them: we will merely remark that
-the change is often so intense as to present all the characters of
-inflammation. It is then admissible that in such a state these organs
-should exercise on the economy a much more powerful action than
-before, when their development was imperceptible, and also than they
-do afterward, when they have only to preserve themselves. This in fact
-is proved by observation. At no period of life, does the body grow as
-rapidly as during puberty. The researches of Quetelet and Villermé on
-the weight and height of men at different ages, (_Annales &c._ p. 26)
-leave no doubt on this subject. Thus the annual increase in the weight
-of the body which until the period of puberty was only from three to
-three and a half pounds, suddenly rises to five and six pounds when
-this period commences, and gets to be twelve pounds when it is at the
-summum of intensity. And it is worthy of remark that in females who
-arrive at the age of puberty about two years earlier than males, this
-increase of growth also commences two years sooner. A similar fact
-is observed in those monsters who present in early infancy traces
-of virility: in them the mass of the body is in a direct ratio with
-the development of the genital system; hence their height and weight
-are enormous. This is proved by a great number of facts related by
-authors and particularly by Moreau, Fages, J. G. Smith, Gedike, Meckel,
-Dupuytren, &c. Let us now compare these facts with those pointed out
-when speaking of eunuchism, and it will be shown that the power of the
-genital organs in its nutrition follows in its variations those which
-they experience: that the general growth conforms to theirs, that if
-one advances the other does, and if one be imperfect, the other is
-imperfect.
-
-This increase in the activity of the nutritive powers during puberty,
-is not shown simply by the increase of the substance of the body, it
-manifests itself by other symptoms. More heat is generated in the
-tissues, as is indicated particularly by the facility with which
-individuals at the age of puberty resist cold, and by the interesting
-remark of Quetelet and Smitz, that the summer of all seasons of the
-year is most fatal to them. Ailments of every kind too show in most
-subjects, that the influence of the genital organs on all parts of
-the body may be so great as even to derange the functions: of this
-character are pains, heaviness in the head, vertigos, redness of the
-face, numbness in the limbs, dulness and oppression, palpitations
-of the heart, bleeding from the nose, painful engorgements of the
-lymphatic ganglions, different inflammations, &c. &c. Finally the body
-responds like an echo, to all that takes place in the genital system.
-Need we say that nothing of the kind takes place in eunuchs.
-
-The active development of the genital parts exercises an equal
-influence on the functions of the life of relation, in the faculties
-of sensation, action, and thought. These faculties, which are so
-feeble in the eunuch are extremely active during puberty. This is the
-age of muscular activity and agility. If those who are growing up,
-sometimes are reluctant to take exercise, this feeling of reluctance
-depends on a hyperemia of the nervous centres, which soon disappears.
-Numerous different and generally transient sensations, denote the part
-which the nervous system takes in what passes in the genital system;
-and this is proved also by the frequency of convulsive and spasmodic
-affections at this period of life. The moral susceptibility is then
-still more exalted than the physical susceptibility. The mind directed
-and controlled by the most vivid, most varied, and most transient
-impressions, takes up and lays aside the most opposite opinions, and
-adopts the most hazardous enterprises. This disposition has existed
-to so great a degree as even to constitute a kind of monomania, so
-transient as to be almost imperceptible, and during which crimes,
-(particularly that of arson) were committed. This fact rests on the
-authority of Osiander, Henke, of the faculty of medicine at Leipsick,
-of Marc and of many other authors. (_See Marc’s memoir on incendiary
-monomania, Annales d’hyg._ October, 1833.) But the mental state
-resulting from the change of puberty is characterized particularly by
-the readiness with which one shares the affections of others, partakes
-of their sympathies, and sympathizes with them. This is the moment of
-generous ideas, or as is remarked by those, whose minds no longer feel
-the action of organs which have become mute, the period of illusions.
-How much experience ought not the mind to gain when passing through
-this moral tempest? Is it astonishing then to find weak minds and cold
-hearts among eunuchs? Being deprived of these organs which at the
-period of puberty give so marked an impulse to the system, they do not
-feel it: the most active of all moral excitants is absent. Judge from
-this of its power, and yet it is this stimulant which is so much abused
-by the onanist.
-
-Let us resume our remarks. We have seen by comparing the eunuch to the
-perfect individual, the male to the female, and the hermaphrodites to
-those persons whose genitals are perfect, that the genital organs, from
-the simple fact of their existence, exercise a well-marked influence
-on the physical intellectual and moral constitution of individuals. We
-have also seen by comparing the period of life when the genital organs
-are actively developed, with that when they are simply preserved, that
-the influence which has been spoken of, is exercised with a variable
-degree of intensity, and is in a direct ratio with the vital activity
-which exists in these organs. We may then state as a positive truth,
-that the genital system modifies extensively the action and sensation
-of all our organs, and modifies it in proportion as it is itself
-excited. This fact stated, the question whether venereal excesses can
-or cannot do much injury is resolved. We may, _à priori_, affirm,
-that when the genital organs pass from a state of repose to that of
-excitement, and from this to a state of action, their influence on the
-other organs is always in an increasing ratio. To prove this requires
-no new facts. This action and this progressive increase of power,
-result, inevitably from the comparisons we have made. Life is so
-mysterious and on the other hand, coition is so transient, that what
-takes place in the tissues during its continuance is concealed from
-view: but we may be certain that something takes place in them, that
-some disturbance there occurs and that the disturbance is greater
-during the act of venery than during the preceding states. This act
-then exerts more influence than it appears to exert, as it affects
-all parts of the organization. If when the genital system appears at
-rest, it exercises so much influence on the vitality of the other
-organs, what must be its power when the venereal sense is excited in
-it, and further when this sense is carried by masturbation or coition
-to the greatest degree of excitement. How much then must these secret
-functions be modified, whose exercise is so intimately connected with
-that of the genital organs! Certainly those who say that the possible
-consequences of venereal excesses are exaggerated, have not taken this
-view of the subject.
-
-
-§ 2. POWER OF THE GENITAL ORGANS CONSIDERED IN A STATE OF EXCITEMENT.
-
-When these organs are in a state of _excitement_, they present a
-greater degree of excitement than at any of the phases of the state
-of repose, not even excepting that of puberty. We may say that they
-have passed from the chronic to the acute state. They not only
-become the seat of a vivid and special sense, but they also present
-a kind of turgescence of erethism, and I will say of very remarkable
-inflammation. They swell, become firm and redder, hotter, and moister:
-their sensibility becomes extreme. Their power ought certainly to
-be increased in proportion to the distance between this state and
-the one of repose. This excitement however is so transient, and the
-functions on which it reacts are so mysterious, that a great part of
-its immediate influence cannot be estimated. For in order to mark the
-action of the genital organs on the mode of existence on the action
-of the different tissues we must compare individuals to individuals,
-that is a whole life with a whole life, or at least we must compare two
-long portions of the same life. On this point the study of the state of
-repose, of that state which is incomparably the most common, has been
-useful to us, for we have arrived at facts, by considering their remote
-consequences, which at the moment of their production, constantly
-escape. The state of excitement however does not manifest itself solely
-by the sensations which attend it. Different signs show that the rest
-of the economy feels that the power of the genital organs is increased.
-
-In fact when this state is well marked, the heat of the other parts
-of the body is increased. The eyes are more brilliant: the colour of
-the complexion is more lively, the pulse is quicker, and the patient
-experiences a kind of febrile agitation which in satyriasis and
-nymphomania, that is, in the greater degrees of human venery, presents
-the characters of a highly marked fever. The secretions also undergo
-important modifications, which are but slightly marked in man, but are
-easily recognised in a great number of animals, who exhale during the
-_period of heat_, a strong and most generally a disagreeable odour. The
-function of nutrition also suffers from this state: thus if it appears
-too frequently, or is continued too long, the embonpoint disappears,
-the flesh becomes dry, and the body exhibits that leanness which is
-seen so frequently in those who are extremely salacious. But, I repeat,
-a great part of the influence exercised upon the nutritive functions by
-the genital organs when in a state of excitement would be overlooked,
-if only the phenomena mentioned were taken into account. In fact these
-phenomena are only those which fall directly under the notice of the
-senses, and we believe that their number and proportions would increase
-infinitely, if the observer could directly inspect the tissues closely.
-
-But the most striking fact in the state of excitement is the
-development of a special sense, the _venereal_ sense. This fact
-characterizes this state and it effaces the others to such an extent
-that it seems to form it alone. We shall not attempt to describe the
-genital sense: a sense cannot be described. We may however ask what is
-required? Even as hunger impels to eat and thirst to drink, this sense
-impels to the act of venery. It is the bond which brings the two sexes
-toward each other, which unites them and which makes, in the words of
-the disciples of a new belief, a perfect individual of the male and
-female. This sense may be only feebly excited, and then may have only a
-moderate degree of power. But when it is exalted, the chain with which
-it binds the free will is of incalculable power. The male dreams of the
-female: the latter of the male. One of the opposite sex is continually
-present to the mind and eyes and imagination. Individuals and forms
-which at other times appear by no means remarkable, now seem perfect
-and excite transports of admiration. Riches and honors are no longer
-esteemed, and even life itself is considered as not worth possessing.
-All necessities have disappeared before one only. Hunger and thirst
-are no longer felt. In fact it is a state of delirium. All the senses
-are concentrated in one: it commands them and receives from them, like
-a blind master, all the illusions which they present to it: and then
-fatigued by this violent state and exhausted by its excess, even when
-not satisfied, it is as it were extinguished. Such is the power of the
-genital organs, those organs which are abused by the onanist. Who then
-can question the physical evils with which its abuse may be attended.
-
-
-§ 3. POWER OF THE GENITAL ORGANS CONSIDERED IN A STATE OF ACTION.
-
-If the individual either by legitimate modes or otherwise, wishes to
-satisfy his desires, the state of excitement becomes changed to one of
-action, and the genital organs then arrive at their greatest degree
-of power. All parts of the genital system are interested, and combine
-their actions: the testes prepare the semen: the excretory ducts convey
-it: the prostrate gland and the muciparous follicles secrete their
-special humours, and the mucous fluids flow to the sexual parts. The
-erectile tissue, which forms the whole of the glans, the cavernous
-bodies, the clitoris, and most of the external and internal labia, the
-vagina &c., solicits to itself and retains the blood, becomes swelled
-by as much as it can contain, hardens and enlarges to the utmost of
-its capacity. At the same time the genital sense passes rapidly through
-all the degrees of excitement: and finally arrives at that point beyond
-which it cannot extend: every muscle, every mature fibre in the genital
-system is then convulsed: the seminal vesicles, the muscles surrounding
-the urethra and those which are attached to the anus contract with
-violence, and the semen, the loss of which causes so much exhaustion
-even when discharged involuntarily, is convulsively expelled.
-
-The scene now changes: the genital apparatus, lately so full of life
-now becomes flaccid: the scrotum becomes loose and pendent, and a
-sensation of torpor, of fatigue, of chill follows. The convulsive
-motions are succeeded by a kind of paralysis, and all attempts at new
-excitement are vain.
-
-During this tumult and after this crisis, the general state of the
-patient conforms in every manner to that of the genital system. Thus
-the face reddens, the neck swells, the veins become filled; the skin
-is now burning and now moistened with sweat, the heart beats with
-rapidity; in fact there is a state of fever, which almost justifies
-us in placing the act of venery among diseases. At the same time the
-nervous centres, the cerebrum, the cerebellum, the spinal marrow,
-experience a very powerful impression. As the state progresses,
-consciousness is lost, and the subject is as it were in a state of
-delirium. The will is suspended, and the muscles are not controlled by
-it, but by the nervous centres which are so much irritated. Thus the
-trunk and limbs are agitated by involuntary motions and chills. This
-disturbance increases until the crisis arrives, when the convulsion
-affects the genital system; a fit of epilepsy as it were ensues: the
-sight becomes dim, the trunk stiffens and the neck is thrown back: and
-finally this state might be regarded as a violent access of disease if
-the beginning and end of it were not known.
-
-Now however the individual is changed: his face has lost its color,
-his limbs are stiff, without motion and as it were paralyzed: the head
-is painful, the mind is slow and the limbs are incapable of the least
-effort. The hearing is dull, the sight is deranged, and the external
-senses impart to the brain only imperfect impressions. The pulsations
-of the heart are feeble, the pulse is small, the veins are collapsed
-and the eyelids are livid. The soul is left in a state of languor and
-sadness and becomes as it were melancholy.
-
-This picture although giving the principal points is far from being
-complete; in order to be perfect it should include that which is not as
-well as that which is seen. If the simple labor which takes place in
-the genital organs at puberty, is sufficient to modify materially the
-functions of nutrition, functions which when deranged give rise to many
-diseases, what must be in this respect the influence of the venereal
-act, and a fortiori of venereal excesses. This influence, like that
-exercised by this act on the nervous system cannot be appreciated at
-the moment it is produced, for it is not immediately perceptible. An
-idea of this can be gained only in two modes: one consists in measuring
-the long intervals which exist between a state of repose and that of
-action: we then say that if the first can modify to such an extent the
-texture of these organs, their powers of sensation and of action, how
-great must be the power of the second. In this manner we reason in this
-instance.
-
-In the other mode an opinion may be formed by remarking the physical
-alterations and functional disorders which have been the consequence
-of them. This kind of proof which we shall soon examine will not fail
-us. We shall then see that the diseases affecting the nervous system,
-that system which is powerfully disturbed during coition, are not
-the only ones resulting from venereal excesses. We shall see that
-all alterations of tissue, every physical disorder, may be caused by
-them: and thus we shall complete the proof of this fact that the act
-of venery not only produces that convulsive state which is so powerful
-while it continues but that it also exercises on all parts of the body
-an action which is extremely powerful and is also the source of many
-evils. When we think of the power of the act of venery, and consider
-that it may be indulged in as often as an individual chooses, and that
-if the legitimate mode of indulgence, the concurrence of the sexes is
-denied, the individual may abuse himself; when we reflect we say on
-all this, we may fearlessly assert that most of the inconveniences and
-diseases afflicting the human species, arise from venereal excesses.
-
-We have hitherto considered masturbation and coition abstractedly
-and as if there were no circumstances to change the influence they
-exercise. But is this always the case? Are there not individuals who
-are rendered indisposed by a single act of venery? Are there not others
-who can repeat this act with impunity at near intervals and for a long
-period of time? Farther is its influence always the same? Are there not
-circumstances which render it more or less injurious and dangerous at
-different periods of life? And now what are the circumstances and the
-causes of all the differences we have mentioned? This subject will be
-considered in the next chapter.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-CIRCUMSTANCES WHICH RENDER THE ACT OF VENERY MORE OR LESS INJURIOUS TO
-THE CONSTITUTION AND TO THE HEALTH.
-
-
-These circumstances are of two kinds: some depend on the act itself:
-others are independent of it and depend most frequently upon the
-disposition in which the economy is at the moment of its occurrence.
-Let us study in succession these two orders of circumstances.
-
-
-§ 1. CIRCUMSTANCES CONNECTED WITH THE ACT OF VENERY WHICH RENDER IT
-MORE OR LESS INJURIOUS.
-
-We have seen in the preceding chapter that the influence of these
-organs is much greater the more vivid their excitement is: that,
-for instance, this influence has more intensity during the state of
-excitement than during that of repose: finally that its greatest
-degree is felt in the act of venery. The natural consequence of these
-facts is that the greater the excitement of the genital organs during
-this act, the stronger must be the impression caused by it. We may
-then say that its power of doing injury, other things being equal, is
-in direct ratio with the force and duration of the excitement which
-attends it. And further this result is proved by observation.
-
-Compare the two sexes together: the female presents instances of
-venereal excess, much less frequently than the male. Whence is this
-difference? Is it not because the genital sense in females is much
-less susceptible of excitement than in males, and therefore the act of
-venery causes them much less fatigue? I know that this fact has been
-disputed: and it is asserted that the female is fully as sensual as the
-male; and that if females show their feelings less, it is because they
-are controlled by custom. I know also that the reluctance of females
-to submit to the approach of the male is ascribed to a kind of tender
-coquetry which tends to increase the ardor of the former. Finally, the
-redness of the genital organs of females during the period of heat, has
-been mentioned as proving the intensity of their sensations. (_Marc_,
-_Dict. des Sc. med._, _art. Celib. etc._) But these arguments cannot be
-maintained in opposition to that which daily experience proves to be
-true, viz., that as a general fact, females are much less addicted to
-the pleasures of love than males, and experience less fatigue during
-sexual intercourse.
-
-The inferiority or perhaps the advantage which females have over males
-in this respect, depends on the passiveness which they naturally
-exercise in the act of generation: and hence their desires are less
-strong. The state of manners justifies their reserve in this respect,
-and points out a physiological fact, or rather they are the consequence
-of it. As to the pretended coquetry of animals, I do not believe in it
-strongly; and in regard to that of females I believe that it has caused
-more to err than their desires. If the venereal passion be equally
-developed in the two sexes, why is onanism more common in males than in
-females, notwithstanding certain conditions ought to produce a contrary
-state of things? And farther do not many wives yield themselves to the
-caresses of their husbands, without desire and without enjoyment? and
-yet this indifference does not prevent conception, for the sensation
-of love is not with them, as with the male, an indispensable condition
-of the work of generation. Finally would there be any prostitutes,
-if coition caused in females the same exhaustion as in the male?
-Females then are indisputably less sensual than males; and when this
-fact is taken in connexion with the circumstance that women are less
-frequently victims of venereal excess, does not this tend to prove,
-that, other things being equal, the act of venery is, as before stated,
-less injurious, in proportion, as the sensations attending it are less
-vivid? Perhaps this explains why females generally live longer by two
-or three years, than males, notwithstanding the pains and dangers of
-pregnancy, parturition and lactation: and this fact may be deduced
-according to Sir John Sinclair, from the registers of mortality of
-different countries, and from the rent tables which have been kept
-in Holland for a hundred and twenty-five years. Farther, it is well
-ascertained that every thing which contributes to give more force and
-duration to the sensations attending the act of venery, also increases
-the fatigue and disorder which follow it. Coition taken in its simplest
-sense, and considered only as an excretion of semen, undoubtedly
-causes much less injury than if it occurs with other sensations. Thus
-intercourse with public women and generally with those who do not
-excite strong sensations is generally attended with less derangement,
-as Hunter has remarked, than if accompanied with violent passion. Some
-authors however as Sanctorius and Tissot have advanced a contrary
-opinion; but they have evidently confounded the state of the mind with
-that of the body. When the soul is possessed of a violent passion, the
-ardors of love continue a longer time, are not so soon satisfied:
-but does it follow from this that the body presents more resistance.
-Certainly not, but only that the pernicious effects are felt less at
-the time; although at a later period they will be perceived.
-
-One reason why masturbation is more pernicious than coition arises
-from the state of mind during the two acts. The onanist, and here we
-allude only to those who have some ideas of sexual intercourse and
-love, having no material object which is the beginning and the end of
-its pleasures, the imagination must supply and invent it. This mental
-labor renders the sensations stronger and the body more disposed to
-feel them. Added to these, the onanist is desirous of prolonging his
-feeling, and having under his control certain circumstances which in
-sexual intercourse hasten the denouement, he retards it. Thus with
-fatal skill he gives to this destructive vice all the power it can
-possess, and experiences all the evil which this vice can cause.
-
-
-§ 2. CIRCUMSTANCES INDEPENDENT OF THE ACT OF VENERY, WHICH RENDER IT
-MORE OR LESS INJURIOUS.
-
-The economy is not equally affected by venereal excesses in all
-individuals at all periods of life. There are some circumstances
-which make it necessary for masturbation or coition to be more or
-less frequently repeated in order to be injurious. Hence if we wish
-to know the real influence of these acts, these circumstances must
-be considered. These are numerous but they are not all known. Two
-individuals indulge in onanism: one becomes ill in a few weeks: but the
-other resists the pernicious habit longer. These two individuals were
-certainly in different states, as the event proves. This fact however
-was indicated previously by no circumstance: their age, constitution
-and manner of living before this were similar: in fact the reason why
-they were affected so differently cannot be told. The difference here
-presented by two individuals may be observed in the same person, when
-considered at different epochs and periods of life. He will resist the
-excess of masturbation and coition to a greater degree at some times
-than at others, although the circumstances on which these differences
-depend are not known. There are then unknown circumstances which have
-an effect on the consequences arising from onanism. These remarks are
-highly important and seem to be well understood; and it is clear that
-there is no possible security for the onanist: in vain does he look
-for encouragement by comparing himself to others, or by remarking of a
-comrade: “if he had been as healthy as I am, his health would still be
-good, he would not have died:” or by saying “why should I fear what I
-have indulged in so long with impunity.” This mode of reasoning is out
-of the question when the truth of the preceding remark is admitted, and
-it is then impossible for a person to deceive himself; and the reason
-that so many abuse themselves is because they think themselves stronger
-than others.
-
-Besides these circumstances, there are some which are well known
-and which contribute more or less to render the act of venery more
-detrimental. These circumstances consist first, in the general state of
-the functions at different ages and in the peculiar state of some of
-them at different _periods_ of life; second, in a coincidence of action
-between the act of venery, and other causes of disease; third, in the
-alterations which the constitution may have already suffered, and in
-the disposition existing to contract certain diseases; fourth, finally
-in the state of the diseases with which the patient is afflicted, when
-he indulges in the act of venery.
-
-§ 3. INFLUENCE WHICH THE GENERAL STATE OF THE FUNCTIONS HAS AT
-DIFFERENT AGES, AND WHICH THE PECULIAR STATE OF SOME OF THEM AT
-DIFFERENT PERIODS OF LIFE MAY HAVE ON THE CONSEQUENCES OF THE ACT OF
-VENERY.
-
-Life is composed of three very distinct periods. In the first, the
-body is developed and formed: it is a period of progress: while it
-continues, the organs gain in force and substance: it terminates when
-they have arrived at their greatest degree of perfection: and this
-generally takes place about the twenty-fifth year. During the second
-period man uses the organs as they are formed and constituted. The only
-process which takes place in them is one of reparation, of renewal:
-this is the period of maturity: it generally terminates about the
-fiftieth year. The third period is the opposite of the first: it is the
-period of decline. There is, during this latter period, a progressive
-deterioration of the strength and of the tissues. It terminates with
-life. Thus a state of development, that of maturity, and that of
-decline are the three aspects under which life presents itself. Let
-us trace the effect of venereal excesses in these different phases of
-action.
-
-_First period._ No animal, and particularly no one of the vertebrated
-animals can procreate on entering the world. The genital organs
-doubtless exist at that time, but their form is rudimentary, which
-proves that they are incapable of doing much. These organs do not
-acquire the power of fulfilling their special functions, until a more
-advanced period of life, which period varies in different species of
-animals, but is nearly the same in all individuals of the same species.
-Until this time there is no secretion of prolific semen in the male,
-nor creation of ovales in the female: the procreative power does not
-exist.
-
-Man is no exception to this common rule; his genital organs, although
-distinct, are scarcely developed at the moment of birth. The penis in
-males, the nymphæ and clitoris in females appear it is true to have a
-certain size, but this size does not depend on the development of the
-true spongy, erectile tissue of these parts. The genital apparatus
-continues to grow, although slowly during infancy, but it does not
-become filled for reproduction until after the rapid development seen
-at puberty. Hence in man, as in all animals, the power of reproduction
-does not exist until after some portion of life has elapsed. What is
-this portion? why does not the power come earlier or later? this is of
-but little importance: existence is necessary a certain time before
-it appears. But as God has made nothing useless in this world, we may
-fearlessly assert that those who before the age for procreation, excite
-in themselves the feelings attending this faculty, do an unnatural act
-and one which is necessarily pernicious.
-
-Thus _à priori_, and by the application of general laws all premature
-indulgences are reproved. This opinion is confirmed by the study of
-the human body in the first third of its existence. This period of
-life is marked by two facts of the highest importance. It is then
-that the organs form, that they become perfect in substance, extent,
-and texture. It is then also that they acquire in action and in the
-power of receiving impressions the characters which form their special
-constitution, that is, the state which considered at the same time
-in all the organs, composes what is called the _temperament_. During
-Infancy and in youth, the formation of the substance of the body and
-of its constitution, is going on. Let us compare with this process, on
-the regularity of which the health, and well-being of the individual
-depends, let us compare, we say venereal indulgences, or rather
-masturbation, for this alone is then possible; we shall then see why
-the generative faculty was not born with us, and why the precocious
-excitement of the genital sense is attended with so much danger.
-
-The first result of this excitement is to hasten the material and
-sensitive development of the genital organs. The preternatural size
-which masturbation gives to the penis in children is so remarkable
-that this alone is often sufficient to reveal this habit. Farther
-this excitement not only awakens the venereal sense long before the
-legitimate period of its appearance, but it acquires so much power
-that the youngest persons brave all connective means to satisfy it.
-Here then we have a system of organs forcing their development forward
-at the expense of the other organs. This state undoubtedly causes
-derangement and if we compare the genital organs with those which have
-the least sensibility, we may form an opinion of the consequences
-of it. If we reflect on the symptoms attending dentition which are
-often severe; or those depending on too rapid growth of the bones, and
-then measure the great difference between the vitality of the osseous
-and genital systems, we can form an idea of the injury caused by the
-premature enlargement of the genital apparatus. Although there may be
-no real disease, yet the wasting of the body, the enervation which
-results from excessive growth are often sufficient to give to a young
-man the appearance of an onanist.
-
-If such feelings arise simply from the osseous system, what must we
-expect when onanism, with its train of moral and of sensual feelings,
-forces the genital organs to take part in the efforts of growth. The
-power which is then impaired is the same which we have seen extend
-over all parts of the organization, that, whose action when regular,
-contributes so much to make each tissue perfect, in fact that which
-when removed gives to man the characters of an eunuch. Now consider
-onanism as possessing this power and using to do injury all the
-energy which it possesses to do good; what limits shall be assigned
-to its injurious effects? and yet some authors question them. Many
-general phenomena of puberty also appear prematurely, when premature
-indulgences call them into development. Thus the beard appears on the
-chin, the pubis is covered with hairs, the voice assumes a deeper tone,
-and the first indications of virility show themselves much earlier than
-is proper. These symptoms serve to trace the aberrations which onanism
-causes in the formation of the organs. This vice too does not surely
-hasten or retard; it deranges: for the derangement of the functions
-is not generally manifested by irregularities in formation, aspect,
-and texture, but by material alterations, by diseases. Hence why
-inflammations of all kinds, and numerous organic affections result, as
-observation proves, sooner or later from anticipated pleasures: now as
-the susceptibility of the organs varies in individuals, and as in one,
-the heart, in another the lungs, the stomach &c. is most liable to be
-affected, we see why the list of diseases caused by onanism, comprises
-most of those which afflict the human body.
-
-Nor is this all; if the excitement of a sense, which affects all the
-other organs, and to which they respond, occurs at a time when their
-mode of action and of sensation, or their temperament is not formed,
-this latter varies from what it would be, if developed calmly and
-uninfluenced by this excited sense. Hence not only the _health_ but
-the _constitution_ suffers from the too precocious use of the genital
-organs. He who might have attained the age of manhood, with a robust
-temperament by which his body resists numerous bad influences by which
-it is constantly assailed, will after indulging in onanism, be exposed
-to all these influences. This vice then compromises both the present
-and future health of the body; the present by the diseases with which
-it is accompanied, and the future by those for which it prepares.
-Hence if the young man escapes with life, he is as it were loaded with
-a tribute of ills which he must pay before long and perhaps always.
-Thus the indirect influence of onanism in producing human suffering is
-enormous. I consider it even as greater in proportion than that of the
-most immediate consequences of this fatal habit. This is confirmed not
-only by daily observation, but it cannot be otherwise. How much then
-do those deceive themselves who seek for the diseases of masturbation
-without believing in their existence, and who continue to indulge
-because they do not see its abuses.
-
-If premature indulgence cause so much injury it should be one of
-the most interesting duties of humanity to prevent children and
-young persons from abusing themselves, and although the practice of
-onanism cannot be controlled by laws, legislators might however fix
-the age under which marriages could not legally take place. We must
-however admit that circumstances connected with the social state of
-different people, with the power of procuring the means of subsistence
-for a family and the necessity of having vigorous children have
-contributed not a little to fix this age. Thus the laws frequently
-present differences which can only be explained by taking into view
-the necessities under which they were passed. Females however are
-allowed to marry much younger than males: this depends on two facts,
-first because puberty takes place earlier in females than in males,
-and secondly because the latter require their organization to be more
-advanced to resist the fatigue of generation.
-
-The age at which the venereal power enters into full action, and when
-its exercise is attended with the least detriment has been generally
-determined on two distinct grounds: first, the physical aptitude for
-sexual intercourse: second, the general state of the organization.
-The marriageable age has been fixed at an earlier or later period
-according as legislators have assumed one or the other of these bases.
-The first served as foundations for the matrimonial laws of the Romans:
-and probably the second served as a guide to Lycurgus, who prohibited
-men from marrying before the age of thirty-seven, and to Plato who
-recommended that every child born of a female younger than twenty years
-old or begotten by a man less than thirty years, should be branded with
-infamy. J. J. Rousseau too reasons in the same manner: “until the age
-of twenty,” he says, “the body grows and has need of all its substance:
-continence is natural, and if not observed it is at the expense of the
-constitution.”
-
-Although the physical aptitude for coition comes at the age of puberty,
-this fact proves nothing except that the genital organs can then be
-used. It does not follow that the genital power is fully developed
-or that the body is in the state most favorable for its use. Who
-would venture to say; that because masturbation is practicable in
-early infancy that it is not more injurious than at a later period of
-life? Hence the cause and degree of the evils attendant on premature
-indulgence is to be sought for in the degree of perfection of the
-organism as we have already stated. We therefore think ourselves
-justified in saying that other things being equal the period of life
-when the act of venery is attended with the least trouble, is that
-which begins when the organization is completed, is perfected; and as
-a reverse of this formula, we may say, that other things being equal,
-venereal enjoyments anterior to this period, are more detrimental, the
-less perfect the system is.
-
-The _perfect state_ then is the point to which the system must
-arrive, before the act of venery is permitted, and before marriage
-is allowable. There is then no longer any fear of disturbing the
-formative process. Look at animals, those at least which are not
-domesticated; they do not indulge in the act of reproduction, until
-they have attained their full vigor, and how often too do severe
-battles take place for a female. The domestic animals live in a manner
-which hastens the development of the venereal sense; and they often
-indulge in procreating at an early period, but suffer for it, and the
-genital faculties soon become extinct. It seems also to be proved by
-the researches of Hofalker of Inspruch and Girou of Buzaringues, that
-both in man and animals the age of the individuals has an influence
-on the sex and quality of the offspring. But why look to animals for
-proofs? Daily observation and the testimony of all authors, put beyond
-all doubt the danger of precocious indulgence. There are certainly
-numerous individuals of every age who indulge in venereal excesses;
-but those cases which come under our notice, or whose histories are
-related by authors, are generally those of young people. Different
-causes I know may contribute to this result; one of the principal is,
-that masturbation is the act of venery most frequently practised before
-the adult age, and that this is generally more pernicious than coition.
-We have already stated one reason for this difference; we may add that
-as onanism does not require the concurrence of the sexes, it is more
-liable on this account to excess. But do these causes alone explain
-why the immediate consequences of venereal excesses are not seen with
-but few exceptions except at an early period of life. The enormous
-disproportion arises from the precocity of these excesses, and also
-from the state of the economy before it is perfect.
-
-We have now to determine at what period of life the body arrives at
-its perfect state and the distance which separates it from this state
-at the different ages which precede it. This period however is varied
-by many circumstances, and it is far from being the same in every
-individual, in the same country or in the same climate. We can then
-present only mean results, deduced from those collected in France which
-are the most numerous and authentic.
-
-As we have already said, the organization of the human body is
-composed of two parts: the development of the tissues and that of
-the constitution. The economy then cannot be said to be in a perfect
-state until this double development is finished, and the organs
-have gained all their power and substance. Unfortunately the labor
-of the constitution and its progress in activity and in receiving
-impressions, cannot be estimated by positive rules: but it is connected
-so intimately with the development of the body, that this can give a
-sufficiently exact idea of its progress and state. We may then simply
-by a glance at the development of texture, fix with a certain degree
-of precision, the value of these words: _premature_ and _precocious
-enjoyments_.
-
-It would be out of place to examine the different organs separately and
-trace their growth, and in the present state of science we cannot give
-this labor the precision necessary to attain our purpose. But there is
-one fact which can be measured, viz., the weight of the body. Let us
-state then the varieties in weight presented at different periods of
-life, as determined by Quetelet and Villermé.
-
-The mean weight of a male child at birth is three kilogrammes and
-twenty decimetres. Each year its weight increases in the following
-proportion:
-
- At 1 year he weighs 9 kil. 45 dec.
- 2 " " 11 34
- 3 " " 12 47
- 4 " " 14 23
- 5 " " 15 77
- 6 " " 17 74
- 7 " " 19 10
- 8 " " 20 76
- 9 " " 22 64
- 10 " " 24 52
- 11 " " 27 10
- 12 " " 29 82
- 13 " " 34 38
- 14 " " 38 76
- 15 " " 43 62
- 16 " " 49 67
- 17 " " 52 85
- 18 " " 57 85
- 19 " " 60 06
- 25 " " 62 93
- 30 " " 63 95
- 40 " " 63 67
- 50 " " 64 46
- 60 " " 61 94
- 70 " " 59 52
- 80 " " 57 83
- 90 " " 57 83
-
-This table shows us that man attains the maximum of weight at forty
-years of age. At this age then we may regard the economy as being
-perfect. Now when we consider that persons from twelve to eighteen
-years indulge most frequently in masturbation and that this habit may
-be formed at a very young age, we may easily conceive of the ills
-with which it may be attended. This consequence is seen more clearly
-and exactly by the following table. The mean weight of man when the
-organization is complete being sixty-three kilogrammes sixty-seven
-decimetres, at the time of birth he has yet to gain sixty kilogrammes
-forty-seven decimetres.
-
- At 1 year old 54 kils. 22 dec.
- 2 " 52 33
- 3 " 51 20
- 4 " 49 44
- 5 " 47 90
- 6 " 46 43
- 7 " 44 57
- 8 " 42 91
- 9 " 41 02
- 10 " 39 15
- 11 " 36 57
- 12 " 33 85
- 13 " 29 29
- 14 " 24 91
- 15 " 20 05
- 16 " 14 00
- 17 " 10 82
- 18 " 5 82
- 20 " 3 61
- 25 " 0 74
- 30 " 0 02
-
-Hence it will be seen that a man who at the moment of birth only
-possesses about .05 of the growth he afterwards attains, will have at
-most only a quarter of his full weight when 5 years old, at which age
-many children begin to indulge in masturbation. When ten years of age,
-he has yet to gain nearly .60 and nearly .40 of his weight when he has
-arrived at his fourteenth year. When sixteen years old, one fifth of
-his weight is still deficient, and at eighteen years nearly one tenth;
-his growth although nearly completed at the age of twenty-five, is not
-entirely attained, since even when thirty years old, the weight of the
-body is capable of a slight increase.
-
-_Of the effect of venereal excesses when the subject of them has
-attained his growth._ The age of maturity is the period when venereal
-pleasures are attended with the slightest derangements and dangers. At
-this period these pleasures may not only not be injurious, but may even
-be necessary. This last circumstance would be sufficient to distinguish
-this period from those of the growth and decline of the body, when
-these pleasures are never useful. Let it not be thought, however, that,
-at the age of maturity, they may be indulged in to excess, or that the
-pleasures of love are limited only by the power of indulging in them,
-this is a great mistake; abuses are less frequent, but they do occur,
-as is seen both by experience and by simple reasoning. Although at
-the age of maturity the body increases but slightly, yet the process
-of nutrition is not arrested. It is true that the size and weight of
-the body no longer increase, but its substance is constantly renewed.
-The act of venery may then interfere with and derange as before the
-function of nutrition. The constitution also may be affected, and
-although the regular course of its formation may not be deranged, yet
-it may be deteriorated and its influence on the action and sensation of
-the different organs is so great, that if this deterioration proceed
-to any extent, these organs will suffer. Thus the health may be
-injured and the constitution impaired in adults, by venereal excesses;
-their influence however is resisted longer. The adult age may even
-present more unfavourable conditions for venereal excess than the
-period of growth. It may be attended with diseases transmitted from
-preceding years. In the adult age, the errours of youth are atoned
-for: wretchedness, debauchery, and excesses of every kind may leave
-their mark upon the body. Venereal excesses then find the constitution
-impaired, the health deranged, and they increase the evil already
-existing. Those particularly who have indulged in masturbation in
-their youth, perceive on arriving at the adult age, that if they wish
-to taste the pleasures of love, even to a moderate extent, they are
-affected with bad feelings which prove that premature indulgences must
-be paid for with interest.
-
-Different circumstances may render the act of venery injurious at the
-adult age, but as these do not belong exclusively to this age, we shall
-speak of them hereafter.
-
-_Of the effect of venereal excesses in the period of decline._ The
-faculty of procreating in mankind has its limits: as this power is not
-attained till at a certain period of life, so too it continues only
-for a certain period. The spermatic animalculæ, the microscopic sign
-of the power of generating, are seen only during a portion of human
-existence: they do not appear till puberty, and disappear in advanced
-life. This is true also in regard to all animals: the rule is a general
-one. God has willed that the period of maturity should be the only one
-devoted to love: is it not a fair conclusion that those who transgress
-this law expose themselves to its penalties? As the sense of venery
-precedes, so too it may outlive, the procreative power; it then excites
-to indulgence at too late a period of life. Examples of this anomaly
-are very common; hence we need not refer for them to the works of the
-old writers, we will merely say that a large portion of those committed
-for attempts at rape are old men. Fortunately the venereal sense is
-that which suffers the soonest from excesses; and if sometimes the
-venereal desires are excited, the state of the genital organs prevents
-their indulgence.
-
-Sometimes, however, the case is otherwise: excited in different ways
-the genital organs in old men, may for a few moments appear to have
-regained a faculty which they considered to be lost; these imprudent
-persons soon pay dearly for their indiscretion. Let us reflect a moment
-on the state in which venereal pleasures find man in his old age.
-His substance, instead of increasing or of continuing sound, wastes
-away. We have seen in a former page, that after the fortieth year the
-weight of the body begins to diminish; the tissues also vary in every
-respect from the perfect state as seen at the age of maturity. Farther
-the sensibility is diminished, the vital activity is enfeebled, the
-faculties become enervated, in short the economy is impaired. Need
-we now to make any remarks in regard to the most exhausting of human
-actions to show its danger? And yet we have only pictured old age as it
-progresses of its own accord, gently and slowly, without being hurried
-on by any infirmity; but this rarely happens.
-
-In speaking of the adult age, I have pointed out the affections with
-which it is attended. But the case is worse in old age. All parts of
-the body have suffered so many attacks, have been so often affected,
-that hardly one of them can be called sound. Hence every cause of
-disease is serious and important, the body being as it were ripe for
-a diseased affection. What ought then to be the influence of the act
-of venery? Will it not quicken into life, the seeds of disease which
-are as it were already sown? In fact it often has a violent effect on
-the system, and sudden death follows exertions which ought not to be
-made. How many old men have yielded up their existence in the nuptial
-bed, when their term of life might have been continued, if they had not
-exhausted their strength in unnatural exertions.
-
-We have said that the peculiar state of some functions may render the
-act of venery more injurious at some periods of life than at others.
-The functions to which we alluded, were digestion, menstruation,
-pregnancy, and lactation.
-
-Masturbation and coition are often practised after taking food.
-Sometimes the general excitement attending the labor of digestion
-extends to the genital organs, and excites to these acts. We cannot
-say that they are then always injurious: as this would be contradicted
-by facts; but that they frequently are is supported by the opinions of
-all authors, who have written on the subject. “Coition after eating,”
-says Sanctorius, “is injurious,” and he attributes the same effect to
-thoughts of venery. His commentator Lorry confirms this opinion.
-
-The act of venery during digestion, may injure in two modes. First by
-deranging the digestive system, and by exposing it to the affections
-which are the usual consequences of such a derangement. To this
-must be referred most of the derangements usually presented by the
-digestive organs of onanists, who merely watch their opportunities
-for self-pollution, without regarding whether digestion is or is not
-finished. Happily vomiting then sometimes rids the stomach of food
-which might be badly digested, and thereby cause more disturbance.
-
-The second mode in which the act of venery acts during digestion, is
-by causing a general state of excitement, which adds to that caused
-by the digestive process. All the organs as the heart, lungs, brain,
-&c., are during digestion in a state of hyperemia, of congestion;
-they are crowded with blood, as is indicated by a great number of
-symptoms. It can easily be imagined that venereal excitement under
-such circumstances, may become the cause of inflammations and organick
-affections, or may, at least, contribute to their development;
-by increasing also a congestion caused by an abundant repast, it
-may immediately excite severe and fatal symptoms. Instances of
-individuals who have died during the act of coition, after leaving the
-dinner-table, are by no means rare. Campet states a case where a man on
-quitting the dinner-table, at which he had drank freely, was accosted
-by a public woman, went home with her, and died in her arms. A marshal
-of France a few years since, met his death in a similar manner.
-
-The act of venery, if indulged in during the period of menstruation,
-may sometimes derange this function.
-
-The injuries resulting from coition during pregnancy have never been
-doubted; by some, however, too much importance and by others too
-little has been attached to this state. Levret attributes most cases
-of abortion, which cannot otherwise be accounted for, to this cause.
-Zimmerman, Gardien, Murat, Dugès, &c., also regard this act as a
-frequent cause of miscarriage. Different conclusions have been drawn
-from these opinions. Some authors assert, that females have a right to
-deny their husbands during gestation. Montaigne is of this opinion.
-Some natives as the Mahometans, repudiate all intercourse with pregnant
-females. In some African tribes, pregnant women are secluded, and no
-one is allowed to have intercourse with them. Pallas states that the
-Calmuck Tartars condemn the person, whose incontinence has caused
-abortion, to pay a fine, the amount of which is directly in proportion
-to the age of the fetus.
-
-The most general opinion however of physicians on this subject, is
-that coition to a moderate extent during pregnancy, and where there is
-no disposition to miscarriage, is not generally detrimental: but that
-when this act is repeated imprudently, it may cause great excitement in
-the uterus, and be attended with abortion. Continence is particularly
-recommended to nervous females, and must be insisted upon when there
-is reason to fear abortion. We must however observe, that venereal
-excesses have often been indulged in during pregnancy with evil
-intents, but without producing the desired result.
-
-Lactation has also been considered by some authors as contra indicating
-the pleasures of love. Children it is said have been known to become
-convulsed, when nursing just after their mothers had indulged in sexual
-intercourse. Lascivious nurses have generally been regarded as bad.
-Many mothers, however, admit the embraces of their husbands, and their
-offspring does not suffer. We are far from thinking that the influence
-supposed to be exercised by the act of venery upon the milk of nurses,
-is entirely unfounded; hence this act should be used with moderation.
-
-_Influence which the act of venery may have, when coincident either
-with the action of other causes of disease, or with alterations in the
-constitution and health._ When an individual suddenly changes his mode
-of living, and the influences to which he has been exposed, and becomes
-a subject to new influences, his health most generally suffers to a
-certain extent. This is seen in the young man who comes directly from
-the pure air of the country into the confined atmosphere of the city,
-and in those who remove from the temperate to the torrid zone. The
-action of powerful causes of disease, of excessive heat, of deleterious
-exhalations, often adds to the simple change of habit. Thus all authors
-who have written on the diseases of warm countries, consider the act
-of venery, as one of the most active occasional causes of yellow
-fever, of malignant fevers, of cholera morbus, and generally of the
-severe diseases contracted by Europeans. A similar disposition may
-be seen in young men, who pass many hours in the infected atmosphere
-of hospitals, and particularly in dissecting-rooms, if they indulge
-with females or in onanism: typhus fevers have been caused by it.
-The individual who lives in a filthy neighbourhood, who experiences
-privations, who indulges to excess in wine or spirituous liquors,
-who labors hard either corporeally or mentally, who is deprived of
-sleep, who is affected with sadness, &c., bears the act of venery
-badly; it adds to the enervation already felt, and generally robs the
-individuals of health. Venereal pleasures should be abstained from,
-during the prevalence of epidemics: every person is then disposed to
-the prevailing disease, and a single act of coition may produce it.
-
-The influence of the act of venery is much more injurious, when the
-causes which we have mentioned, and generally all those which may
-impair the constitution, have affected it to a greater or less degree.
-Diseases of long duration, if badly treated, excesses and the causes
-mentioned above may bring the system to such a state, that enjoyments
-even if seldom indulged in, may produce great suffering and disease.
-Venereal excesses may also create predispositions and change them
-as well as those which have a different origin into other morbid
-affections.
-
-It is well known that the venereal desires do not generally exist,
-except the person be in a state of health. The same may be said too
-of the generative power, if we may judge from Haller’s remark that
-the spermatic animalculæ disappear during disease. It is ascertained
-that the number of conceptions is in a direct ratio with the degree
-of health enjoyed by a people; they increase in a healthy season,
-and diminish in an unhealthy season. This fact is established by the
-researches of Villermé in regard to the births and deaths in France,
-Italy, England and Belgium, and also in regard to the marshy parts
-of France at different periods of the year, (_Ann. d’hyg. publ._,
-_January_, 1831.) Thus then the genital sense, like that of hunger,
-and probably the power of procreating, like that of digesting, is
-most generally suspended during disease. Is not this one of the many
-warnings of the organization, as to the preservative power?
-
-It is true however that individuals indulge in coition and masturbation
-although even in an advanced state of disease. This is most frequently
-seen in onanists. “I have seen,” says Pinel, “a person affected with
-a dynamic fever who was entirely exhausted, and yet his passion for
-onanism was so powerful, that on the sixth day of the disease he
-still attempted to excite his organs, although death was coming upon
-him.” Similar cases have been witnessed by every practitioner, which
-we shall mention in the course of this work. Thus then even a severe
-disease does not entirely prevent the act of venery. Let us now inquire
-what is the effect when such people indulge. It must be admitted that
-this indulgence is at least useless, except in very rare cases, where
-continence is the cause of sickness. Strictly speaking, this may be
-the case in certain chronic affections and in some few individuals,
-but it is rare. The power of the act of venery is so great, and the
-diseased organs are generally so sensitive to the impressions made
-on the economy, that if there are apparently some diseases which
-seem unaffected by this act, it is because the modification which
-they experience escapes observation. We may then state as a general
-rule that if the act of venery be indulged in by sick people, it is
-injurious and generally to a great degree. How great is the injury when
-the disease is caused by venereal indulgences.
-
-It often happens that diseases resist to an unaccountable extent all
-remedial agents: suspicion is excited and finally we find that the
-patient, an onanist before he was taken sick, has continued to abuse
-himself through his sickness: and again, the symptoms of the disease
-under treatment gradually disappear: but the strength does not return,
-nor does the patient become convalescent. Debility increases instead
-of diminishing: the patient becomes thinner and the fever continues:
-finally the sick person falls into a consumption and the fatal habit
-is at last discovered. In others the disease seems to be terminated,
-but is suddenly re-excited, the patient being too hasty to indulge
-in masturbation or coition. This happened to a man fifty years old,
-who was gouty, and much addicted to the pleasures of the table, and
-whose case is related by Hoffman. Having indulged in coition soon
-after he was convalescent from pleurisy, this man had a relapse which
-was much more dangerous than the original illness. The same author
-states a similar case, where the imprudence was followed by death.
-Scrofula, rickets, gout, and stone are says M. Marc, diseases, which
-on arriving at a certain point, are aggravated by coition. The same
-remark applies to all other maladies. M. Falret mentions a female
-affected with melancholy at the hospital Salpetrière, whose mental
-affection has several times been re-excited by onanism, after she was
-thought to be cured. Cutaneous diseases in particular may give an idea
-of the influence exercised by the act of venery on those maladies
-which are deeply situated. Alibert mentions the history of an herpetic
-disease which was always more intense after the patient had indulged
-in onanism: this unfortunate individual was then tormented by a severe
-itching.
-
-The irregularity and singularity of the symptoms of those sick people
-who indulge in onanism, are particularly remarkable. The nervous system
-evidently feels an influence in addition to that of the disease, or is
-disposed to be particularly affected by all those which occur. This
-fact, established by Tissot and Georget, should always be remembered
-by physicians. We may form an idea of the derangement caused by the
-act of venery in the progress and appearance of diseases by the severe
-symptoms which it produces in wounds and particularly those of the
-head. Tetanus, delirium, and other nervous symptoms have often been
-caused by it. Fabricius de Hilden states the case of a young man whose
-hand was amputated, and whose physician forbid having any intercourse
-with his wife, who was also informed of the danger. But when all
-the symptoms disappeared, and the cure was progressing rapidly, the
-patient feeling desires to which his wife could not respond, procured a
-seminal emission without coition; it was immediately followed by fever,
-delirium, convulsions and other symptoms, and in four days the patient
-died.
-
-Death also often follows coition in patients affected with diseases
-of the heart and large vessels. This was seen in the case of Corroy,
-a servant at the hospital la Chardité. One evening while intoxicated
-he met a courtezan with whom he proposed spending the night, but in
-the midst of his transports he suddenly died. On examining his body it
-was found that he had an aneurism near the commencement of the arch of
-the aorta. The rupture of this tumor was evidently the cause of his
-sudden death. Probably also a similar occurrence happened in the case
-mentioned by Felix Plater. The patient having married a second time,
-experienced, while consummating the marriage, such a violent degree
-of suffocation that he was forced to suspend his efforts: the same
-symptom re-appeared whenever he again attempted it. Having consulted
-a charlatan, he was recommended to persevere: he did so, and died.
-Examples of sudden death during coition are not rare. Death generally
-arises from aneurism or apoplexy. Pliny the naturalist mentions two
-cases, and Tabourdot in his _Bigarrures_, has preserved the epitaphs of
-several who have perished in this manner.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-SYMPTOMS AND DISEASES CAUSED BY VENEREAL EXCESSES.
-
-The genital organs when they are abused are precisely in the same state
-as if they were diseased. In this case in fact, they are not in their
-normal state for they are in action when the health demands that they
-should rest. Hence when we consider them either specially or as to
-their action on the rest of the body, we see that they resemble organs
-in a morbid state; they are, as it were affected with an intermittent
-malady, having distinct periods of access, which are repeated more
-or less frequently, according to the acts of the onanist. The local
-condition of these organs is at first that which they present during
-the act of venery, but at a later period they may present different
-alterations, which continue after the periods of access, in the same
-manner as the tissues are modified, if the cause which renders them
-diseased continues to act on them. The general state of onanists is
-also perfectly analogous to that observed in diseases. In them, the
-genital organs are the seat of different symptoms, and the focus of
-numerous diseases. The symptoms appear first only during the periods of
-access, or for a few hours afterward: then they continue longer and the
-intermissions become shorter and afterward are only remissions: finally
-the disease is perfectly continued. This is the usual course of the
-symptoms of this affection which may be called the _genital_ disease.
-Frequently however, one of the derangements of the reproductive system,
-assumes, on account of its individual peculiarities a more determined
-character than the others, and becomes as it were independent of them.
-This disorder is then no longer a symptom but becomes a disease which
-is in one phthisis, in another myelitis, epilepsy, amaurosis &c. So too
-with a wound; this which at first caused only fever and other symptoms
-intimately connected with it, becomes afterward gastroenteritis,
-tetanus, or some other disease which has its regular place in systems
-of nosology. _Voluntary pollution_, when it becomes injurious must
-then be considered as an _affection_ having its symptoms, and also as
-a _cause_ of disease. We shall proceed to consider it in these two
-relations in two different sections. The first will be devoted to the
-symptoms arising from this pollution, the second, to the diseases
-caused by it.
-
-
-§ 1. SPECIAL SYMPTOMS OF VENEREAL EXCESSES.
-
-Before proceeding to describe these symptoms, we would remark, 1st
-that the results of venereal excesses are so analogous to those
-of involuntary pollution, that it is impossible to point out any
-difference between them: 2d that the general effects of these
-pollutions, whether voluntary or involuntary, are also extremely
-analogous to those caused by the slow destruction of an organ; those
-for instance observed in phthisis pulmonalis, cancer of the uterus,
-profuse suppurations, chronic diarrhœa, &c. Thus then the results
-of masturbation and of coition are the same as those of involuntary
-seminal emissions, which is decidedly a disease of the genital organs,
-and as those of other severe maladies affecting different parts.
-Are not these analogies sufficient to prove that we were correct in
-regarding the state in which the genital organs are momentarily when
-abused, as a state of disease.
-
-One of the most constant effects of excessive masturbation is the
-loss of flesh. This symptom shows itself more or less rapidly, and
-extends to a greater or less degree. We may regard it as one of the
-circumstances in which onanists most resemble those affected with
-phthisis, with diarrhœa, and generally, individuals confined with a
-severe and long continued illness. The loss of flesh arising from
-onanism has not unfrequently been attributed to a too precocious growth
-and vice versa. This symptom is much more striking in some onanists,
-as it is attended with excessive appetite and a healthy state of the
-digestive organs. How great must be the influence of the genital organs
-when abused, on the nutritive process, to cause this loss of flesh,
-even under the conditions most favorable for its gain. It is not
-uncommon to see onanists affected with a complete state of marasmus:
-their frame is reduced to a skeleton and presents in anticipation a
-picture of the state in which death will soon place them. Many parts,
-as the loins, thighs and lower extremities are often remarkable for
-their extreme emaciation. Sainte Marie who has observed this fact,
-attributes it and also the debility of these parts, to a morbid state
-of the spinal marrow, and not unjustly. The facility with which
-onanists regain their flesh on leaving off these bad habits, is equally
-remarkable with their rapid loss of substance. There are individuals
-however who remain thin and dried up through life, in consequence of
-abusing themselves while young.
-
-The loss of strength generally follows the loss of flesh and returns
-also with it. At first debility only follows the act temporarily, but
-afterward it continues longer: new emissions of semen take place, and
-even before the subject of them has regained the strength exhausted
-by a previous indulgence. In the morning he rises from his bed with
-difficulty: during the day he is idle, stupid, and indolent, and
-pursues his avocations without any spirit. If he goes up stairs, or
-ascends a hill, his heart beats forcibly, and he pants very much. This
-debility, if the cause which produces it does not cease to act, may
-increase to a frightful degree. We have seen onanists whose bodies were
-bent down by the weight of the head and chest and curved as in old
-men: these individuals could not stand erect, their lower extremities
-could not support their weight, and at the least motion they felt giddy
-and faint, and finally terminated the remnant of their existence on a
-sofa or bed which they could not leave. Many authors, Sanctorius and
-Tissot among others, have asserted that this debility is greater or
-less according to the position of the body during the act of venery;
-but we attach but slight importance to this circumstance, although
-they may have some effect. We think more of Sainte Marie’s opinion,
-that the lower part of the body is frequently weaker than the upper,
-because the spinal marrow is affected by seminal emissions. As the
-flesh returns when the onanist ceases from his bad habits, so too
-does his strength, and generally rapidly. But there are many, who are
-affected during their whole lives with great debility, which unfits
-them for many occupations. It is very common to find individuals who
-complain of being incapable of any physical effort, and who request
-their physician to give them strength. On questioning them, almost all
-admit that in their youth they have been addicted to onanism. Some do
-not wait to be questioned but refer to their former excesses as the
-source of their troubles and denounce them as the cause of their actual
-debility. Most invalids however do not refer so far back to the origin
-of their illness or even do not dream of it: they remain at peace
-with themselves and their ignorance might deserve to be respected,
-if they were not or would not probably be fathers, and if it did not
-become us to excite their vigilance in regard to their children. Thus
-then venereal abuses may cause not only a transient debility, but an
-exhaustion which may be continued, as long as life lasts.
-
-The loss of flesh and strength is not the only symptom of consumption
-which _undermine gradually_ the onanist: many signs indicate that
-all the functions are affected as it were with a loss of strength.
-The countenance instead of the vermilion glow of health, is pale and
-without freshness, or of a yellowish, earthy, leaden, and livid teint;
-the lips lose their color, a bluish circle surrounds the eyes, the
-eyelids are puffed out with œdema: the flesh is soft and flaccid: the
-pulse is small and feeble: upon the slightest motion or during sleep,
-the forehead, chest and palms of the hands are bathed with profuse
-perspiration: in some patients the hands and feet are edematous: in
-short, the symptoms are those of general atony, which are attended with
-a slow hectic fever, denoting that the economy does not yield without
-reaction to the destructive disease.
-
-We ought perhaps to wait before speaking of the disturbance of
-the digestive organs, which almost constantly attends venereal
-abuses, until we had finished describing the symptoms of voluntary
-spermatorrhœa and were stating the diseases resulting from it. In fact
-the digestion is deranged then only because the digestive organs are
-diseased, and are affected with dyspepsy, gastritis, erteritis, &c.;
-but these derangements are so common after the loss of the seminal
-fluid, that we think ourselves authorized to treat these derangements
-as symptoms. Venereal excesses may affect the digestive organs in
-several ways, first by disturbing digestion if they occur while this
-process is going on: this fact has already been stated. We might
-add that when food is taken too soon after masturbation or coition
-digestion is seldom performed well. This fact did not escape the notice
-of Sanctorius, who remarks, _Cibus copiosior solito post immoderatum
-coition interimeret nisi succederet aliqua ciborum corruptela_.
-Venereal excesses may also affect the digestive apparatus in another
-manner besides that of directly disturbing its functions. This system
-is so intimately connected with all parts of the human body that all
-are influenced by it. If then the digestive functions are disturbed by
-most morbid states, can they remain uninjured when so many symptoms
-are presented by the genital apparatus which has become the focus of
-so many symptoms! Certainly not: these functions also take a part
-and a large part in the disorders which are the usual consequences
-of venereal excesses. A moderate exercise of the genital organs may
-excite the stomach, render the appetite more keen and the digestion
-more rapid. Hence why young men who begin to masturbate or to indulge
-with women have frequently an insatiable appetite, which leads them to
-eat constantly, which is very striking inasmuch as debility and loss of
-flesh ensue in just the same manner. But such a state of things cannot
-long continue: thus numerous signs soon show that excesses in venery
-may act on the digestive tube in another manner than by rendering the
-appetite more keen and the digestion more easy. In fact the appetite
-does not long resist excesses of onanism: it first diminishes, then
-disappears, and is often replaced by a decided disgust for every kind
-of food; in some patients it becomes irregular, capricious: in others
-it remains: the latter have most cause of complaint, for it continues
-longer than digestion is performed. “My appetite remains,” writes
-an onanist to Tissot, “but it is a misfortune, as eating is followed
-by pain in the stomach and my food is rejected.” Many onanists feel
-pains of a similar character after eating. In others there is a sense
-of oppression, of fulness, in the epigastric region. In some there
-is a gnawing feeling resembling that produced by a want of food:
-this symptom is very common in girls, who in consequence of secret
-practices, have become affected with leucorrhœa. In some the face and
-cheeks present a redness which contrasts remarkably with their habitual
-paleness: onanists are frequently affected with headache, vertigo,
-flushed face, &c. In some the slowness of the digestion is indicated by
-eructations, which occur long after taking food: or the belly is tense
-and filled with wind. Food, which was formerly digested with ease, is
-now oppressive: and the list of articles of diet is shortened every
-day. Some onanists have been known in these cases to indulge in ardent
-spirits with the vain hope of exciting their appetite, and regaining
-their strength. Repeated vomitings, constant pain in the belly and a
-slow fever are also frequent symptoms of the deep-seated affections of
-the digestive organs. In many patients the intestinal canal is more
-liable to be affected by venereal excesses, than the stomach. Obstinate
-constipation in some, diarrhœa and borborygmi in others are the usual
-signs of the affection of this canal. Fournier and Begin mention the
-case of a young man, who almost constantly experienced after excess
-in coition, severe colics followed by excessive diarrhœa and an
-insupportable tenesmus. Rest, gummy drinks, the use of farinaceous food
-and a small quantity of red wine, soon dissipated these symptoms, which
-sometimes threw him into an alarming state of languor and debility.
-(_Dict. des. Sc. Med._, _art. Masturbation_.) Hoffman relates a
-similar case. We have more than once met with similar effects. A young
-man whom we attended in 1832 died, after excesses in onanism, with
-diarrhœa. This unfortunate individual, although in the last stages
-of consumption, still indulged as soon as he was left alone, in his
-deplorable habit. Diarrhœa, or rather intestinal ulcerations, which are
-then the cause of it, generally appear in onanists as in those affected
-with consumption, at the last stages of life. Thus a young man,
-nineteen years old, addicted to masturbation from childhood, died a few
-years since at Hotel Dieu. The most active watching and the strictest
-mechanical methods could not arrest his fatal manipulations. Diarrhœa
-was added to his habitual loss of semen, and he died three months after
-entering the hospital, in a perfect state of marasmus.
-
-Many authors have repeated after the statements of Hippocrates, that
-individuals affected with consumption, arising from venereal excesses,
-have no fever. This is an error: they die as we have already stated,
-with true hectic fever, which is caused by the state of the different
-organs, and particularly by that of the genital system. Of this,
-numerous instances might be cited: the following is related by Dr.
-Federigo, the Italian translator of Portal’s work on consumption. “I
-knew,” says he, “a female who was affected for many years with extreme
-debility and entire loss of appetite. A slow fever every evening had
-rendered her extremely thin: her eyes were pale and sunken; her skin
-was very hot, and it was highly painful for her to stand erect: a
-profuse discharge weakened her still more; and she was in an advanced
-state of marasmus. All the active remedies, as preparations of iron,
-decoctions of cinchona and mineral waters were tried without success.
-She died in a most deplorable state of consumption. I attempted, by
-questioning her as to her mode of living, to discover the cause of
-this disease, but unsuccessfully. A month before her death however,
-she told me with tears in her eyes, that she brought her debility upon
-herself, by indulging constantly and for many years in a secret and
-murderous habit.” We will add that Sainte Marie having found that daily
-involuntary pollution occurred in diseases of languor, as soon as he
-became acquainted with the dissertation of Wichmann, discovered that
-many slow nervous fevers were kept up by this affection.
-
-From our remarks on the influence exercised by the genital organs
-on the nervous system, even when simply in a state of excitement
-or repose, it will not surprise, if we should state, that in this
-system are seen the affections resulting most frequently from the
-abuse of these organs. In fact the diseases of motion, sensation
-or of intelligence, that is of the faculties which are situated in
-the nervous system, are in fact the most common consequences of
-masturbation, and of venereal excesses generally. We have already
-spoken of the gradual diminution in the locomotive powers of the
-onanist. That of sensation presents very different phenomena, it is
-exalted as much as the first is diminished. Farther it is admitted
-that these two faculties are in an inverse ratio to one another. This
-increase of the susceptibility may take place at any age in consequence
-of venereal excesses; but it occurs much more readily in young
-persons, that is at that period of life when the mode of sensation
-assumes those characters which at a later period more than all the
-others constitute the temperament. Thus the excessive susceptibility
-generally presented by onanists, does not belong to those transient
-symptoms which disappear when the habit ceases: but, on the contrary,
-it continues, long after the habit has ceased, and its influence is
-long felt. How many persons of every age complain of being extremely
-nervous. Some know that this depends upon their own conduct, which they
-deeply regret. Interrogate them, and many will admit the excesses of
-their youth. We have rarely neglected to verify this remark and the
-responses have generally confirmed my suspicions. These individuals are
-seldom free from disagreeable feelings, from pain and inconvenience of
-some kind: their symptoms may vary extremely, and change very suddenly,
-but they are generally or always indisposed one way or another.
-This can be readily imagined: every thing affects them: cold, heat,
-dryness, moisture, rain, snow, food, drink, exercise, rest, in fact
-all these modifying circumstances find in them an organization ready
-to be acted on. The act of venery, the first source of their nervous
-susceptibility, subjects them to constant privations. A young man,
-twenty-two years old, whom we attended a few months since, told me in
-a depressed manner the constant inconveniences which he experienced
-from onanism. The following is his narrative, which we shall give
-here because it presents a faithful picture of the state in which the
-nervous system exists in most persons who have indulged in onanism.
-
-“At sixteen years of age,” said he, “I learned to masturbate; this
-habit, I continued, for several years, with a kind of fury. My health
-soon became affected, my strength failed and also my digestion. I
-soon perceived a heat and constant pain in my stomach: my throat
-was inflamed and my feelings were extremely bad. The advice which I
-received and the alteration in my health, caused me to renounce this
-habit. My situation soon improved and I gained daily, but at the same
-time my desires returned and I shortly relapsed into my former errors.
-The same cause produced the same effects and I again abandoned onanism,
-promising never to indulge again. For two years I kept my word:
-unhappily this time however my health was not restored as at first, and
-I continually experienced all the sufferings which I have described.
-Besides I have become so sensitive that every thing incommodes me:
-the least change in the weather and particularly a storm causes me a
-great deal of suffering. Farther I cannot say what temperature is best
-for me, for I do not experience much difference whether it be cold or
-warm. I have but little desire for females, and although indulging at
-times after long intervals, yet I have always suffered for several days
-afterward, in the same manner as after masturbation. I feel constant
-pains of a lacerating character in the limbs: sometimes also, but more
-rarely pains in the back; often also, I have pains in the stomach and
-colic. My digestion although better than before, is far from being
-good: I can take but a few articles of food, and the smallest portion
-of wine, spirit, or coffee produces great distress.” This was the
-young man’s statement: he was deeply affected by the slightest cause:
-his appearance was sad, he was tired of himself and was constantly
-tormented by thoughts of his former excesses. I have seen him several
-times since; and I have reason to believe that his obedience to my
-advice improved his health.
-
-It may be said that this patient is a hypochondriac. I admit it: but
-what is hypochondria, save an excessive susceptibility, added to all
-the inconveniences which result from it, and the derangement of the
-digestive functions? And hence all authors who have spoken of this
-disease, and of hysteria, which resembles it in so many respects, have
-classed venereal excesses among their most common causes. I might
-cite in proof of this, Tissot, Louyer-Villermey, Fodéré, Foville and
-many others. Oppenheim, physician to the grand vizier, attributes
-the frequency of hypochondria and of hysteria among the orientals,
-to their abuse of the pleasures of love. Pinel gives the history
-of a hypochondriac who at the age of puberty abandoned himself to
-masturbation which was followed by frequent involuntary pollutions.
-In another place he speaks of a similar case: and almost every
-practitioner can mention several.
-
-The affection of the nervous system in onanists consists not only in
-an increased susceptibility, but is indicated also, by a number of
-symptoms, as pains sensations and spasms of every kind. Angelot has
-related the case of a young man affected with constant discharge of
-semen, who, among other phenomena, presented so great a degree of
-nervous irritation that he experienced a vibration over his whole
-body at the slightest noise. Some patients experience pains in the
-limbs as if they had been beaten; others are affected with intense
-headache and pains in the loins which reappear at each pollution:
-or wandering pains, which however are sometimes fixed, are felt in
-the course of the nerves and are similar to neuralgia. We shall see
-hereafter that painful affections of various kinds have been the
-more or less direct consequence of venereal excesses. Sensations of
-giddiness, of formication or crawling, &c., may also be perceived: some
-patients experience cramps which at first are felt only during the
-act of venery, but which afterwards reappear at other times. Spasms,
-contractions and generally the convulsive motions so often observed
-in onanists usually result from severe affections of the nervous
-centres, affections which we shall speak of directly. A very frequent
-symptom and one too which has never deceived me as to its nature, says
-Georget, are palpitations of the heart attended with difficulty in the
-respiration, slight suffocating feelings, &c. He remarks also that
-fainting and partial or general trembling appears on the slightest
-contradiction and often without any known cause in onanists. These
-remarks are very true: palpitations and stifling sensations continue
-sometimes for years after onanism has ceased, and fainting fits,
-trembling sensations, &c. show themselves during or immediately after
-the act of venery.
-
-The heart and the mind suffer as much as the body from excesses of
-masturbation. To be assured of this we have only to remember the
-power exercised by the genital organs in the physiological state, on
-the ideas and feelings. Generally the necessity which the onanist
-experiences for dissembling his tastes and for concealing a habit which
-is both ridiculous and vile, renders him taciturn: his eyes are turned
-from the gaze of those around: he loves solitude, avoids the world and
-is embarrassed, and almost as it were ashamed of himself. His manner
-might sometimes pass for timidity, we might almost say for innocence,
-but it is entirely changed, when being in company with professed
-onanists he no longer feels restraint.
-
-It is to this habit of dissimulation, this inquietude with which the
-onanist is constantly haunted, that Montegre attributes particularly
-the difference between self-pollution and coition: but this moral
-torment is far as we shall see from being the only one with which the
-onanist is affected.
-
-In fact, he constantly experiences a sensation of sadness and ennui,
-which is impressed on his countenance and which is the natural
-consequence of restlessness and of the fatigue which he feels
-constantly. He is sad as one is when suffering, and when debility are
-felt. This inward feeling of shame which is banished with difficulty
-when the actions reputed to be bad are often repeated, must also
-contribute to increase his melancholy and sadness. But perhaps
-the worst feelings which torment him, are regret and remorse. The
-exhaustion of his system, his sufferings, the near approach of death
-often render him desperate. He remembers the time when he did not
-indulge in onanism: he remembers those who first taught him that vice:
-his shame, his pains and fears all come up strongly before him. Being
-the author of his own misfortunes he constantly reproaches himself,
-and he remembers all that has been said to wean him from the habit.
-Now picture with these regrets these fears, and the despair we have
-described, the existence of this fatal habit which cannot be overcome.
-The onanist knows this danger and yet he cannot break himself of his
-bad habit.
-
-It can readily be supposed that onanists tortured by the present and
-by the thoughts of the future which appears to them overshadowed with
-clouds, have often wished to terminate their sufferings criminally.
-This has in fact sometimes happened. “I do not believe,” writes an
-onanist to Tissot, “that any human being has suffered as much as I
-have. Without the special care of Providence I should find it difficult
-to support the burden of life.” Some have not the courage to sustain
-life. Esquirol has often known masturbation to lead to melancholy and
-suicide. Orfila also mentions among the occasional causes of suicide
-“the physical and moral disgust, intellectual apathy without any hope
-of cure which often follows premature indulgences of every kind.”
-If the resources of nature had been known to those who thus abandon
-themselves to despair; if they had witnessed, as we have, the rapidity
-with which the health is restored, when onanism is arrested, if they
-had believed in the healing power of time, they would have seen that
-their pains might disappear, their strength might have been restored,
-and they might have enjoyed a long and happy life. The following case
-will teach onanists not to despair.
-
-A gentleman, twenty-four years old, says M. Sainte Marie, in order to
-avoid conscription shut himself up in an isolated chateau under the
-charge of an old and confidential domestic. There in order to lighten
-the ennui of his situation he gave himself up to onanism. After three
-years of this forced seclusion and dangerous excess, he reappeared in
-the world; he was excessively pale and thin, which was attributed to
-the extreme loneliness in which he existed. Marriage was urged upon
-him as a mode of relieving, by an agreeable establishment, this long
-ennui; his strength however failed him the night of his marriage,
-and he was unable, as Montaigne says, to consummate the nuptials. He
-became disgusted with himself, and this feeling soon settled into
-one of deep and fixed despair. One day he swallowed a large dose of
-arsenic, but vomited it soon after with the food which he had eaten.
-He then came to Lyons to seek a death which he considered more worthy
-of his birth and station. He followed very closely for several days a
-celebrated fencer, and finding an opportunity to insult him, did so,
-with no other intent than that of losing, sword in hand, a life which
-had become hateful to him. The fortune of arms decided otherwise:
-although feeble and languid, he wounded his adversary, and this slight
-advantage suddenly changed his resolution. He now saw that life was not
-a series of defeats and humiliations: he desired to live, and in this
-frame of mind he came to consult me. His impotence seemed but a slight
-symptom. I readily saw that it was only the symptom of a well marked
-dorsal consumption. I prescribed ice to be taken internally, iced water
-douches to be used along the vertebral column and a milk diet. After
-continuing this treatment three months, the patient’s health seemed
-perfectly restored. He left Lyons, and rejoined his family, who were
-much concerned at his long absence. I learn now that he is very happy,
-and that his wife has presented him with three living pledges of
-affection. (_Wichmann_, _p._ 91.)
-
-Besides the intellectual and moral effects which we have mentioned,
-onanism often produces a very marked debility of the mental faculties,
-and particularly of the memory. Young men, who previously showed
-considerable vivacity of mind and aptitude for study, become, after
-being addicted to this habit, stupid, and incapable of applying
-themselves: it is evident, that this transitory state which immediately
-succeeds the act of venery, becomes continued when this act is
-frequently repeated, because time is not allowed for the effects of
-it to pass off. This debility of the intellectual faculties must not
-always be considered as irremediable: in fact, these individuals
-sometimes regain their original acuteness, when the habit which
-had enfeebled them is discontinued, before the deterioration is of
-long standing. We might adduce instances of this return. The most
-remarkable, assuredly, is that of an idiot girl, who was restored to
-reason by amputation of the clitoris--an operation performed by Dr.
-Graefe, of Berlin. In a future page, we shall give this interesting
-case in full. Unfortunately, the simple cessation of onanism is
-not always sufficient to efface its effects completely; and many
-individuals preserve, during their whole existence, a certain
-feebleness of mind, which arises from the excesses of their youth.
-The debility of the intellectual faculties does not always stop at
-the point indicated: it may extend almost to idiocy--to the most
-complete stupidity. Most generally, then, the brain, or its appendages,
-are deeply injured, which is indicated by different symptoms, as
-loss of sight, hearing, fits, paralysis, &c. This was the case with
-an individual, whose case is stated by Serrurier, and who became,
-through onanism, perfectly imbecile. This is true, too, of an idiot,
-who was under the charge of Pinel, in the infirmary of Bicêtre. He
-was a sculptor, who had previously been exhausted by intemperance
-and venery. He remained almost motionless and quiet, or at intervals
-indulged in a foolish laugh. His face was destitute of expression,
-and he had no remembrance of his former state. His appetite was
-always good; and, even at the sight of food, his jaws began to move.
-He constantly remained in a recumbent posture; and, finally, became
-affected with hectic fever, which terminated fatally.
-
-It is worthy of remark, in those onanists who become idiots, that,
-while the external senses and the intelligence diminish, the genital
-activity is increased: all these faculties seem to be blended in
-one, the proportions of which seem much greater, as the others
-are diminished. This opposite state of things, found in all cases
-produced by onanism, is particularly remarkable in a case observed at
-the Hospital St. Louis, by Alibert. The patient was a peasant-girl
-twenty-two years old, who was constantly employed in tending sheep.
-The seclusion of this girl’s situation favored the development of
-onanism. She concealed herself in retired and quiet situations, to
-indulge this horrid inclination. Two years elapsed, during which her
-intellectual faculties were progressively enfeebled: she became stupid,
-while the venereal sense was excited to the highest degree. Things
-came to such an extent, that she fell, as it were, into a species of
-nymphomania, for which she was carried to the hospital. The unfortunate
-girl presented a kind of automatic motion, which she could not repress.
-Her head, chest, and upper half of her body were excessively thin,
-while the other half was remarkably plump. The sight, and much more
-the contact of a male, caused in her a state which was soon terminated
-by a pollution. By merely touching this girl, her whole person could
-be agitated and convulsed to a distressing degree, and it was thought
-expedient to send her home. (_Dict. des Sc. Med., Vol. XXXVI., p. 582._)
-
-Are the alternate states of excitement and collapse experienced by the
-brain, during and after the act of venery, the only cause of weakness
-in onanists? Does not the constant state of their mind contribute also,
-as Tissot and many other authors think, to this unfortunate result? Of
-this, we have no doubt.
-
-The yoke which onanism imposes on those who are completely abandoned
-to it, is such, that they have constantly before them a certain set of
-ideas. All their study is confined to avoid the looks of others, and
-to call to mind all the remembrances, and to create all the illusions,
-upon which their senses revel: their strength of mind is consecrated
-to these objects alone. To dissemble, and enjoy themselves, is all
-they wish. The intellectual faculties, being thus neglected, must
-remain imperfect; or even, if we may be allowed the expression, must
-lose their vigour, and waste. We can understand well how the necessity
-arising from this state of things may aid the development of the
-most wicked thoughts. Was not this the case with a young girl, whose
-history, as stated by Parent Duchatelet, is as follows:--
-
-This girl, whose early childhood was spent with her grandmother, a
-respectable and religious woman, was about seven years old, when she
-returned home. For the first four months after her return, she was
-very sad and was not as playful as children are generally, and never
-caressed her father and mother. She lost flesh rapidly. The cause of
-this was sought for in vain; when, one day, a few questions having been
-put to her, she stated, that from the age of four years she had been
-in the habit of seeing boys from ten to twelve years old; that since
-she had returned home, she had had no opportunity, and had indulged in
-self-pollution. In vain did her parents try to wean her from this vice:
-they reasoned with and caressed her; they gave her presents, and all
-the clothes she desired; physicians visited her; the powers of religion
-were tried. But all in vain: the child abused herself, even in her
-sleep.
-
-But a horrid inclination soon appeared: she now desired to see her
-parents dead, and even to murder them. This wish she expressed freely,
-and also her regret at not being able to satisfy her wishes. She
-promised herself to embrace any opportunity which presented. The only
-motives which induced her to do this, were to possess her mother’s
-jewels, and then to go with the men. Things soon came to such an
-extent, that the parents, for their own safety, were obliged to lock
-up their daughter every night, as she did not conceal her intention
-of assassinating them during sleep. The child, being in this manner
-less exposed to observation, abandoned herself to her habits without
-constraint, it being the only wish she could gratify. She never
-laughed, nor cried. She sat the whole day in a very small chair, with
-her hands crossed, and she abused herself as soon as her mother’s back
-was turned. Punishments succeeded no better than presents or caresses.
-One day, her father tied her to the bedstead: she said, “You may
-kill me; but I will not change.” These facts gave rise to a judicial
-investigation, from the minutes of which this statement is taken.
-(_Arch. d’hygiene et de med. legale_, _January_, 1832.)
-
-This young girl certainly had inclinations which were the result of her
-organization. She never became attached even to the grandmother who
-brought her up; and whom also she would have destroyed for her jewels.
-She was not animated by the wish to kill, as by that of acquiring a
-desired object. One day, while a man was talking with her, she looked
-attentively at his breast-pin: when questioned on the subject, she
-admitted that she would kill this man for the sake of this jewel. Her
-passion for venereal pleasures also came from an organic arrangement:
-she had never been led into these enjoyments by men or women. When four
-years old, she sought after little boys; and it was not till she was
-deprived of them, that she resorted to onanism. She admitted that she
-preferred the boys.
-
-Now, I would ask, if this primitive exaltation of a sense, which
-masturbation excited still more every day, could govern a disposition
-which caused her to regard homicide as the best mode of satisfying
-certain desires? Could that state of fatigue, which is constantly felt
-in those individuals who are addicted to onanism, excite in this young
-girl the sympathies which unite each individual to his fellows, and
-give strength to those bonds which she was always ready to break? Was
-it possible for her to love her parents, who constantly thwarted her
-desires? Would not the irritation she constantly felt at not being
-able to give herself completely up to venereal pleasures, react on
-her other inclinations? Would not the obstacles she encountered tend
-to make her think herself surrounded with enemies? Governed by one
-sense, was she in a state to listen to and understand all that was said
-to her, to modify her bad inclinations? Did not her state resemble
-that of animals, who, although mild and amiable, become dangerous and
-wicked, when the genital sense is excited? Finally, does not this case
-prove that deviations of character may result from onanism--that good
-feelings may be changed by this habit--or, at least, that bad ones may
-be called into action?
-
-Moral depravity of another kind may result from onanism. The mind,
-accustomed to seek pleasure in a certain circle of ideas, or a
-peculiar series of sensations, cannot find any in any other manner.
-The enjoyments of onanism are then the only ones which the onanist
-can realize. The union of the sexes has no attraction for him: he
-indulges with repugnance, and thinks the sensations much less agreeable
-than those arising from self-pollution. The genital sense, the power
-of proceeding to the act of venery, and of procreating, remain: but
-depraved tastes have taken the place of the legitimate desires. Tissot
-regards this perversion as more frequent in females than in males: he
-remarks upon the case of a female as stated by Bekkers, over whose
-mind self-pollution had taken such possession, that she detested the
-legitimate modes of gratification.
-
-We believe, that if there are females who prefer onanism to coition,
-it is because the sensual results of the latter are generally very
-uncertain. Besides, Tissot does not exclude the male sex from this
-kind of depravation: the same author states the history of a man, who,
-in being taught onanism by his preceptor, experienced, when first
-married, so great a disgust for the natural relations which result from
-it, added to the exhaustion caused by his manipulations, that he became
-melancholy; which state, however, yielded to appropriate remedies.
-
-A fact published by Alibert is very analogous to the preceding. He
-states, that a young man, brought up in a boarding-house, contracted
-the habit of onanism in his childhood. Tissot’s book was put into
-his hands, which frightened, but did not entirely cure him. After
-reading it, however, he was more moderate, and indulged only at long
-intervals, and when he was excited by very violent desires. Hence, his
-temperament did not change; but he continued robust, and his moral
-faculties preserved their energy: but the frightful habit which he had
-contracted, prevented the development of any desire for the other sex.
-Even when thirty years old, he had never been excited by the sight of a
-female; and his feelings were called into action only by vain images,
-or by the phantoms of his depraved imagination. He had early studied
-drawing, which he had always pursued with ardor. The beautiful forms of
-men, in this beau-ideal of painters, which nature has never realized,
-affected him, and finally inspired him with an extraordinary emotion--a
-vague passion, for which he could not account. It is necessary,
-however, to remark, that this passion had no connexion with the tastes
-of sodomy, and that it could not be excited by the sight of any man.
-Such was his strange situation, when he came to ask my advice. He then
-presented, as I said before, no physical symptom of impotence. He was
-healthy and well-made, and nature had not been unkind to him; but he
-had so abused the use of her gifts, that it was difficult to restore
-to him their proper use. The patient was perfectly acquainted with his
-situation. “There is no effort,” said he, “that I am not willing to
-make, to free myself from my ignominious situation--to drive away from
-my thoughts the infamous images which haunt me. They have deprived me
-of the legitimate enjoyments procured by the union of the sexes--of the
-power possessed by the lowest animals of reproducing their species. I
-am dying of chagrin and shame.”
-
-I considered his disease as a perversion of the venereal appetite. I
-thought that the most urgent indication was to restore nature to its
-true type. In fact, the individual was very robust, at the period
-of consulting me; and farther, as I have said, the beauty of the
-ideal forms of man excited in him voluptuous sensations, during the
-continuance of which the genital organs became excited, and there was a
-discharge of semen: this favored the supposition that he still retained
-some stamina. Hence, there was neither destruction nor essential
-alteration in his physical sensibility; but rather a false direction
-of this faculty of the organism. The following course of treatment
-was proposed. I have already said, that the patient was very fond of
-drawing, and that he applied himself to it with that ardor which is
-the sure guaranty of success. I required him to study carefully the
-female form, and to make drawings of it--to break through his habits,
-and to renounce the Belvidere Apollo for the Venus de Medicis. He did
-so. Nature gradually resumed her rights: he soon preferred a round
-and delicate arm to that which was strong and masculine; and when he
-contemplated the elegance and softness of contour in the female form,
-he began to be cured. After constructing an imaginary model, he sought
-for it in the physical world. Time was required, and perseverance; but
-he was perfectly restored.
-
-
-§ 2. DISEASES ARISING FROM VENEREAL EXCESSES.
-
-There are but few diseases which have not been observed as occurring
-after venereal excesses. The influence of the genital organs is so
-great, and extends so perfectly to all points of the organism, that the
-slightest morbid disposition of the latter is favored by its action.
-Capable of fecundating all the germes of the diseases which occur, the
-abuse of the genital organs produces all those which may happen in
-the body. Hence, we must not be astonished to see venereal excesses
-mentioned in enumerating the direct or indirect causes of most of them.
-We should certainly sometimes be embarrassed to justify this indication
-by positive proofs; for we do not know all that exists, and written
-science does not represent all that has been seen: but, as we know that
-a powerful influence only requires to exist with a morbid arrangement,
-to make of it a disease, the knowledge of this fact alone authorizes us
-to place venereal excesses, which have so injurious an effect, among
-the productive causes of most affections of the body.
-
-Those diseases which are the consequence of this cause generally have
-a special mark, which depends not only upon the fact, that in a great
-many cases it continues to act when they are developed, and therefore
-deranges their course; but which results also particularly from the
-presence among their symptoms of those which belong particularly to
-venereal excesses. Hence, if, in consequence of these excesses, an
-individual should be affected with phthisis, epilepsy, a chronic
-disease of the brain, spinal marrow, caries of the vertebræ, &c., the
-patient will present, besides the special symptoms of these different
-affections, the signs of consumption already mentioned by us, and which
-are generally the consequences of the prolonged abuse of masturbation,
-or of coition; he will become thin, his strength will be exhausted,
-his eyes will be sunken, and present a dark ring beneath them; his
-countenance will be melancholy and suffused; his digestion will be
-deranged; he will suffer from wandering pains, from trembling, and
-from spasms; his mind will become enfeebled; and, finally, he will
-show many of the phenomena which we have described as general symptoms
-of venereal excesses. In these cases, there is, properly speaking, a
-complication of the special disease which they have produced, and of
-this other disease resulting as we have seen before, from the abuse of
-the genital organs. There are, at the same time, the general effects
-of this abuse, which may be seen in all those who are the victims of
-it, and the special characters of diseases which might have arisen from
-some other cause. The practitioner who should be unacquainted with
-these facts, in regard to which we find nothing precise in authors,
-would be liable to mistakes which would render him liable to errors of
-prognosis and of treatment.
-
-The instances of individuals who have died of _apoplexy_, either of
-the cerebrum or cerebellum, during coition, are by no means rare. We
-can readily imagine, that if there be a marked disposition to this
-disease, and that if it be disposed to come on, the derangement in the
-respiration and circulation produced by the venereal action might hurry
-it. This has happened more than once during the digestion of a full
-meal. Most old men who have died during coition, have been affected
-with apoplexy. Hence, authors have generally placed venereal excesses
-among the causes of this affection.
-
-We will mention Cœlius Aurelian, Areltœus, Lomnius, Tissot, Pinel,
-Cruveilhier, Londe, &c. Henry Van Hers mentions a man, forty years
-old, who was attacked with apoplexy while with his wife, the first
-night of his marriage. The attack, however, could not have been very
-severe, as it yielded readily to treatment: but the patient indulging
-in the pleasures of love a few days after his recovery, was again
-attacked, and died. (_Dict. des Sc. Med._, _art. Apoplexie_.) Hoffmann
-mentions one. It was that of a soldier, who died in the act of coition.
-It was found, on opening his body, that blood was effused in the
-brain. Serres’ work on the comparative anatomy of the brain states
-a similar instance. It is that of a man, thirty-two years old, who
-became affected with apoplexy during coition, and after drinking more
-freely than usual. Firm erection of the penis, which continued nearly
-until death had closed the scene, was added to the violent symptoms
-of apoplexy. The cerebrum was healthy; but the median lobe of the
-cerebellum exhibited traces of severe irritation; and the substance
-of the cerebellum was broken in several places; and small abscesses,
-filled with blood, were grooved along the superior vermicular process.
-
-In some individuals, apoplexy supervenes so soon after venereal
-excesses, that we might reasonably anticipate that they contributed
-to its invasion. Thus, a steward, forty-nine years old, whose case is
-mentioned by Andral, fell down in the street, on coming from a house
-of ill-fame. He was immediately carried to the Maison de Santé, near,
-where he died shortly afterward. On opening his body, two apoplectic
-lesions were found; one in the right hemisphere of the cerebellum, the
-other in the left hemisphere of the cerebrum.
-
-In coition, a marked congestion of blood takes place toward this
-organ. It is fair to presume, that such an act frequently repeated
-may predispose to an attack of apoplexy, which is decided sooner or
-later under the action of different causes. It is a fact, however,
-that this affection occurs frequently in those individuals who are
-accustomed to indulge in venereal pleasures. Serres reports the case of
-a man who indulged frequently, and who was attacked with apoplexy soon
-after a day passed in a house of ill-fame. He died two days afterward,
-presenting, among other symptoms, the erection of the penis, and an
-abundant discharge of semen. Post mortem examination showed, as in the
-preceding cases, apoplexy existing in the cerebellum. A similar case
-was reported by Dr. Guiot. It was that of a man, fifty-two years old,
-who was much addicted to women, and who, after several times suffering
-from cerebral congestions, was affected with mania. His genital
-organs were very much developed, and he was frequently affected with
-pollutions. He died, finally, of congestion, with hemiplegia, in twelve
-hours. Among the symptoms presented, were remarked erection of the
-penis, and as it were automatic motions of masturbation.
-
-Deep and chronic lesions have been observed in the encephalon of
-onanists, much more frequently than acute diseases. We published,
-in 1817, a case of chronic arachnitis, which seemed to depend on
-this cause. The patient was a boy seven years old, who entered the
-Hospital des Enfans, at the beginning of the preceding year. This
-child, who was much addicted to masturbation, was usually affected
-with convulsions during this act. He finally became idiotic. He was
-extremely repugnant to take exercise, and he remained very quiet. His
-strength failed, his limbs wasted away, and finally he became affected
-with almost total blindness. The hearing, and generally the external
-and internal senses were also much weakened. Galvanism and other
-remedies were employed in vain. The patient died; and on opening the
-cadaver, we found a very marked inflammation of the portion of the
-meninges which follows the course of the superior longitudinal sinus.
-The surface of the brain, also, appeared to some assistants to be
-inflamed. In another patient, whose history is stated by Desruelles, in
-his memoir on the effects of onanism, the substance of the brain was
-affected. There was paralysis of the left arm, convulsions of the right
-arm and of the muscles of the face. On opening the cadaver, an encysted
-abscess was found in the hemisphere of the brain, on the side opposite
-to the paralysis, and corresponding to the convulsed limbs.
-
-Chronic alterations have frequently been found in the cerebellum of
-onanists. They have been mentioned by some as the cause, by others as
-the effect of onanism. But even admitting that in some cases these
-alterations may have been the beginning of this habit, this fact shows
-the bond which unites the genital organs and the cerebellum, and
-renders more probable the influence which they may exercise upon it. In
-fact, when the disease of one organ deranges the functions of another,
-we may be satisfied that an opposite result is possible. Farther,
-it would be impossible, in most of the cases of which we speak, to
-distinguish whether the cerebral affection or the masturbation had
-precedence. The only thing positively known is their coincidence; and
-this latter has appeared too frequently not to attract attention. We
-will mention several instances of it.
-
-A female, addicted at an early age to the pleasures of venery, finally
-indulged in prostitution; she was at the same time addicted to
-onanism, and at last became affected with nymphomania. Ashamed of her
-situation, she submitted to cauterization of the clitoris, but without
-any good result. She finally died; and we found chronic irritation,
-with induration of the middle lobe of the cerebellum. Small sinuses,
-with callous edges, indicated that an inflammation had existed for a
-long time in this organ.
-
-Gall (in his treatise on the functions of the brain, Vol. III., p. 314)
-has given us the history of a boy, three years old, who was strongly
-addicted to onanism, and in whom two thirds of the cerebellum was found
-to be suppurated.
-
-A young man, nineteen years old, was so much addicted from his infancy
-to masturbation, that all mechanical means were tried in vain to
-conquer this fatal habit. It was even proposed to scarify the penis,
-in order that his motions might be prevented by pain. All attempts
-were in vain; and this unfortunate young man, exhausted by continual
-losses of semen, died three months after entering Hotel Dieu, in the
-most complete state of marasmus. He had often experienced attacks of
-epilepsy. On opening the dead body, we found in his cerebellum an
-encephaloid tumor the size of a nut, which had began to soften.
-
-A girl ten years old, addicted to masturbation, and of a melancholy
-temperament, complained for four months of severe pains in the head.
-These pains increased to such a degree, that for the last three weeks
-of her life she was constantly crying. She was finally carried to the
-Hospital des Enfans. The only additional information obtained in regard
-to her was, that the patient was bedridden for twelve days--that she
-was affected with vomiting of bile, followed by somnolence--that for
-three days she had ceased to speak, or answered with difficulty--that
-she constantly kept her hand to her head, which was thrown back. During
-the last four days, she was comatose: there was a slight degree of
-strabismus, and dilatation of the pupil. A post-mortem examination
-showed inflammation, with purulent infiltration of the arachnoid
-membrane, at the upper part of the cerebellum. The substance of the
-brain presented tubercles and a softening.
-
-Combette has related a case, which to our knowledge is unparalleled;
-viz., complete destruction of the cerebellum in a girl eleven years
-old, who was addicted to onanism. In place of this organ was found a
-gelatiniform membrane, attached to the medulla oblongata by a peduncle
-of a similar character. The genital organs of this girl presented
-evident marks of her habit: the finger could easily be introduced
-into the vagina; the hymen was absent; the external labia were of a
-bright red colour, and seemed to have been frequently irritated. All
-that is known of this patient, who died at the Hospital des Enfans, in
-1831, is reduced to a few facts. She was born healthy and well-made,
-although she was slight; and her physical and intellectual development
-was slow, and very imperfect. On entering the Foundling Hospital the
-13th of January, 1830, she was feeble and ricketty, had but little
-intelligence, and seemed indifferent to surrounding objects. She
-answered questions with difficulty and hesitation. Her legs, although
-feeble, still supported her; but she fell frequently. She was in the
-full possession of all her senses: her appetite was good. Her health
-suffered more the following months, and she was finally obliged to
-remain constantly in bed. Her constitution then appeared impaired, and
-she was as it were stupified. She was depressed, and complained neither
-of pleasure nor pain; if questioned, she merely answered yes or no.
-She laid constantly on her back, her head turned to the left, and she
-moved her limbs with great difficulty. She soon became affected with
-a continual diarrhœa; and she died fifteen months after entering the
-hospital, in a state of complete exhaustion. What was the effect of
-masturbation in this case? Was it the cause or effect of the malady,
-which had disorganized the brain? This habit certainly had a great deal
-to do with it. (_Revue Medicale, April, 1831._)
-
-To these facts others might easily be added, where the affection
-of the brain was manifest, although not verified by a post mortem
-observation: thus, in the following case mentioned by Serrurier, the
-epilepsy, loss of sight, and the destruction of the intellectual
-faculties, certainly indicated a deep lesion of the brain. “I always
-remember with horror,” says this author, “the frightful picture
-presented by a young soldier, after frequent indulgence in onanism,
-and of nocturnal pollutions, which were more violent and copious after
-each epileptic fit. This young man was in a perfect state of marasmus:
-his sight was lost entirely; he was perfectly imbecile, and even the
-calls of nature were unanswered by him. His body exhaled a particularly
-nauseous odour; his skin was livid; his tongue trembled; his eyes were
-sunken, his teeth decayed; and his arms were covered with ulcers, which
-indicated a scorbutic affection. This state continued for six months,
-when the melancholy man died, having struggled for a long time against
-death, which finally terminated his sufferings.”
-
-In the preceding case we can remark, in addition to the symptoms of
-the cerebral affection, the symptoms of the exhaustion of the cachexy,
-presented by individuals who have been reduced very low by onanism. A
-similar state is seen in the following case related by Tissot. Here the
-encephalic affection, to judge of it by the throwing back of the neck,
-and the violent pains experienced by the patient in this part, seemed
-to be situated in the cerebellum, medulla oblongata, or in those parts
-of the arachnoid membrane which are near them.
-
-L. D---- was by profession a watchmaker. He had lived prudently, and
-had enjoyed a good state of health, till he was about seventeen years
-of age. At this period, he gave himself up to masturbation, which
-he repeated every day, sometimes even to the third time; and the
-ejaculation was always preceded and followed by a slight insensibility,
-and a convulsive motion in the extending muscles of the head, which
-drew it very much back, whilst the neck was extremely swelled. A year
-had not elapsed, before he began to feel a great weakness after every
-act. This notification was not sufficient to rescue him from his
-filthy practices: his soul, already devoted to this base habit, was
-incapable of forming any other idea, and the repetition of his crime
-became every day more frequent, till such time as he was in a state
-which gave reason to apprehend his death. Too late grown wise, the
-evil had already made so great a progress, that he was incurable; and
-the genital parts were become so easily irritated, and were so weak,
-that it was no longer necessary that this unhappy youth should be an
-agent, in order to shed his seed. The slightest irritation immediately
-procured an imperfect erection, which was constantly followed by an
-evacuation of this liquor, which daily increased his weakness. This
-spasm, of which he was not before sensible but in consummating the act,
-and which ceased therewith, was now become habitual, and frequently
-attacked him without any apparent cause, and in so violent a manner,
-that during the whole period of the fit, which sometimes lasted fifteen
-hours, and never less than eight, he felt such violent pains in the
-back part of the neck, that he did not scream out, but absolutely
-howled; and all this while it was impossible for him to swallow either
-solids or fluids. His voice was become hoarse; but I did not observe
-that it was more so while the fit continued. He entirely lost his
-strength, and was obliged to give up his profession, being altogether
-incapacitated: thus overwhelmed with misery, he languished, almost
-without any assistance, for some months; and was the more to be pitied,
-as what memory he had remaining, and which he was at length entirely
-bereft of, only served him to take an incessant retrospect of the
-cause of his misfortunes, which were increased by all the aggravating
-horrors of remorse. I heard of his situation, and went to him; I found
-a being that less resembled a living creature than a corpse, lying upon
-straw, meager, pale, and filthy, casting forth an infectious stench;
-almost incapable of motion, a watery palish blood issued from his nose;
-saliva constantly flowed from his mouth: having a diarrhœa, he voided
-his excrement in the bed without knowing it: he had a continual flux
-of semen; his sore, watery eyes were deadened to that degree, that he
-could not move them: his pulse was very small, quick, and frequent: it
-was with great difficulty he breathed, reduced almost to a skeleton in
-every part, except his feet, which became œdematous. The disorder of
-his mind was equal to that of his body; devoid of ideas and memory,
-incapable of connecting two sentences, without reflection, without
-being afflicted at his fate, without any other sensation than pain,
-which returned with every fit, at least every third day. Far below the
-brute creation, he was a spectacle, the horrible sight of which cannot
-be conceived, and it was difficult to discover that he had formerly
-made part of the human species. I had immediate recourse to the
-assistance of strengthening remedies, in order to remove these violent
-spasmodic fits, which so dreadfully brought him back to sensibility
-only by pain: I contented myself with having given him some ease in
-this respect, and I discontinued administering remedies, which could
-not ameliorate his condition; he died at the end of a few weeks, in
-June, 1757, his whole body having become dropsical.
-
-In a case related by Bouteille, surgeon-general of the hospital at
-Lyons, most of the symptoms resulting from the cerebral affection
-existed in the right side of the body, and consequently indicated an
-affection of the opposite side of the cerebrum. The patient was a young
-girl twelve years old, whose constitution was weak and irritable, and
-very slightly developed--doubtless, on account of the enervating habit
-of onanism, in which she had indulged for several years, and which
-her mother’s vigilance could not prevent. Just after recovering from
-a severe illness, which yielded readily to remedies, this young girl
-was very much terrified, which had a great deal of influence upon her,
-as she was extremely sensitive; her sensibility being increased by the
-weak state of her nervous system, produced by onanism. Soon after, she
-was affected by slight convulsive motions in the right foot and arm,
-accompanied by a disagreeable pain in the right knee and in the sole
-of the foot of the same side. Notwithstanding the use of remedies, the
-disease increased, and she was soon unable to carry her food to her
-mouth, her arm was so much agitated. The appetite was variable, and
-the pulse was regular. Sometimes, and contrary to her usual custom,
-the patient was silent; sometimes she was extremely lively, and even
-foolish; sometimes her ideas were incoherent, and she often indulged in
-tears.
-
-Headache and dizziness were perceived, but they soon yielded. At a
-later period, the sight and hearing of the right side were considerably
-weakened: at the same time, the pain in the sole of the foot, knee,
-and part of the right hand became more intense, and the difficulty
-of walking increased. After a time, the disease seemed to improve a
-little: the convulsive motions abated; the intelligence and memory
-returned, as before the disease; but the sight and hearing remained as
-they were. An active mode of treatment was now used: electricity formed
-the principal remedy. The patient was finally cured. Need we remark,
-that in all probability the fright was only the occasion which excited
-the development of a disease already prepared for by the onanism.
-(_Traité de la chosée_, p. 352.)
-
-The convulsive form, the _epileptic_, is one of those assumed most
-frequently by the cerebral diseases produced by masturbation; we can
-easily conceive of this by remembering, that what takes place in the
-act of venery has, as we have already seen, a striking analogy with an
-attack of epilepsy: hence the ancients termed the act of coition, _a
-short fit of epilepsy_. It is unnecessary to state here the numerous
-testimonials found in authors, in regard to the influence of onanism as
-a cause of epilepsy. This influence is a fact mentioned and assented to
-by all. We shall relate a few examples.
-
-There are some individuals who are so susceptible, and present so
-great a disposition to epilepsy, that they have a regular attack of
-it whenever they indulge in the act of venery. Didier knew a merchant
-of Montpelier, of whom this was true. Similar cases are related by
-Galen, Van-Hers, Tissot, Hoffmann, Haller, and many other authors. A
-similar thing is observed even in animals. Alfred Menard had a strong
-watch-dog, who was affected with epilepsy whenever he coupled with a
-slut. These attacks were characterized by convulsions, and a loss of
-consciousness: their duration varied, and was always connected with
-the ardour of the animal, who never was affected except under the
-circumstances mentioned. (_Revue medicale_, March, 1825.)
-
-Epilepsy sometimes supervenes directly after the excesses which cause
-it. Cole, cited by Esquirol, relates the case of a female, who became
-epileptic three days after marriage: but venereal abuses generally act
-slowly, and prepare the body for an attack of epilepsy, which this
-or some other cause excites. Esquirol relates the case of a young
-man, twelve or thirteen years old, who early in life was addicted to
-masturbation, and became extremely nervous, although strong and robust:
-at fifteen years of age he was affected with epilepsy. These attacks
-came on at the moon’s first quarter, and were very sudden: the patient
-fell down, uttered loud cries, and was generally convulsed: his eyes
-were open, fixed, and injected: the pupils were very much dilated:
-and when the fit passed off, he remained exhausted the rest of the
-day. This young man, like most onanists, was extremely susceptible,
-fretting upon the slightest pretext. After six months of treatment,
-the attacks became less frequent: at the end of a year they ceased.
-This young man might have been considered cured, but the pleasure of
-seeing his mother, from whom he had been separated for two years,
-caused a relapse: the same remedial means were again employed, and with
-success. He has, since that, entered into business, and has travelled
-extensively: his nervous system is strengthened: he married when
-twenty-seven years old, and has continued in good health.
-
-Another curious fact has been communicated to us by the celebrated
-Dr. Goupil. A little boy, only eighteen months old, who had been put
-out to nurse, returned home with the habit of masturbation. At first,
-his parents thought but little of this; but when two years old, he
-was affected with an epileptic form of disease, characterized by loss
-of consciousness, convulsions of the muscles of the face and eyes,
-stiffness of the limbs, and sometimes he fell down. These fits becoming
-more and more frequent, Dr. Goupil was consulted. The patient was now
-three years and a half old, and still continued his bad habit. He was
-constantly sad, morose, and stupid. The doctor, not being at first
-aware of the cause, employed different medicines, but unsuccessfully:
-he then discovered the cause, and tried mechanical modes. He put on the
-boy, at night, a kind of strait jacket, by which his arms were kept
-crossed in front of the chest; and during the daytime, he was watched
-carefully. These means succeeding but imperfectly. Dr. Goupil employed
-another strait waistcoat, which was laced behind, and was furnished
-in front with a silver apparatus, to contain the genital organs, and
-having only an opening for the urine. This new obstacle did not answer
-as well as was expected, and the child sometimes escaped all vigilance:
-but as this was rare, he soon gained flesh, and also his strength and
-vivacity. The fits of epilepsy gradually became less frequent. This boy
-is now from nine to ten years old; enjoys good health; and, with the
-exception of a remarkable loss of memory, retains no trace of former
-indiscretions.
-
-These two cases show how far the system can be restored, when the cause
-which disturbs it ceases to act. The following, which was communicated
-by Zimmerman to Tissot, proves the same thing; but it also shows how
-soon a return to the bad habit destroys the good effects resulting from
-its abandonment.
-
-“I have seen,” says Zimmerman, “a man, twenty-three years old, who
-became epileptic, after debilitating his body by frequent masturbation.
-Whenever he had nocturnal pollutions, a fit of epilepsy ensued; and
-the same thing occurred after masturbation--from which, however, he
-did not abstain, notwithstanding the bad symptoms with which it was
-followed. After the fit had subsided, he felt very severe pains in the
-kidneys, and around the coccyx. Having, however, abstained from his
-manipulations for some time, the pollutions disappeared; and we had
-hopes of curing the epilepsy, the attacks of which were less frequent.
-He had regained his strength, appetite, sleep, and color, after
-resembling a cadaver; but having returned to his bad habits, which were
-always followed by fits, he was found dead in his chamber one morning,
-bathed in blood.”
-
-Another convulsive affection, _St. Vitus’ dance_, has sometimes been
-caused by onanism. Marc Ant. Petit has published a case of it, which
-was communicated by Dr. Morelot. It is as follows:--A young girl, eight
-years old, became remarkably thin: her lower limbs were agitated by
-extraordinary motions, which were extended to the upper limbs. She soon
-lost all control over them. The twitching in the muscles of the face
-and eyes was excessive; the patient could not continue in her bed, and
-she was confined to a large chair. Her attending physician thought that
-this might be attributed to the presence of worms, and gave several
-anthelminthics, but without success. Dr. Morelot was consulted at
-this period, and thought that he could perceive the effects of a bad
-habit: he soon became convinced of its existence. By means of great
-watchfulness on the part of her parents, the use of cold baths, musk,
-and camphor, she was radically cured.
-
-Mental derangement is often the prevalent symptom in diseases of the
-brain, produced by excess of masturbation or coition. We have already
-spoken of idiocy; but this is by no means the only change observed
-in consequence of these excesses. Every variety of affection of the
-mind may be caused by them, as is proved by statistics collected by
-several authors, in insane asylums. Yet these abstracts are far from
-presenting the truth. “So many circumstances combine,” says Esquirol,
-“to embarrass the discovery of causes of mental alienation, that the
-one mentioned, like other causes, must often be unascertained by
-physicians.” According to this sagacious observer of all the forms
-of mental alienation, mania is produced least frequently by venereal
-excesses. He adds, that maniacs, during the duration of the periods of
-access, are less addicted, generally, than other deranged persons to
-masturbation; but when they do indulge, this act must be considered as
-a bad symptom, since it constitutes an insurmountable obstacle to the
-cure: it destroys the strength, and finally produces in the patients
-stupidity, phthisis, marasmus, and death.
-
-Dementia is, perhaps, the kind of derangement most frequently observed
-after masturbation. I saw a remarkable instance of this disease in
-a young man, twenty years old, who, indulging in these excesses for
-several years, gradually lost his mental faculties, became averse
-to even his relatives and dearest friends, and finally fell into a
-most perfect state of dementia. The relative frequency of this form
-of mental alienation in onanists has been pointed out in France by
-Esquirol, and in Norway by Holst. (_Annales d’hygiene publ._ December,
-1830.)
-
-Holst has remarked, that paralysis, that fatal symptom which so
-frequently attends all varieties of derangement, particularly monomania
-and dementia, is observed particularly in those insane who are addicted
-to onanism, and to other venereal excesses. This remark is confirmed by
-the two facts, that paralysis is much less common in females than in
-males, and that onanism produces mental alienation much less frequently
-in the former than in the latter. Thus, of 256 persons, admitted at
-the asylum at Charenton, during 1826-7-8, there were 44 men, in whom
-derangement could be attributed to libertinism or to onanism, while
-the same was true of only 3 women. Dr. Holst has shown that a similar
-proportion exists between the deranged of the two sexes in Norway. This
-relation, however, must not be considered as strictly correct; for
-females, being generally very reserved in their disclosures, onanism
-probably passes undiscovered in them more frequently than it does in
-men. It is well ascertained, that one twentieth of the deranged at
-Salpetrière, is composed of public women, who are for the most part
-affected with dementia and paralysis. Now, consider that masturbation
-is much more frequently a cause of derangement among the rich than
-among the poor. (_Dict. des Sc. Med._, vol. xvi., p. 179.) And
-remark, too, that at the Charenton asylum, where only persons in easy
-circumstances are received, there are proportionally more patients with
-paralysis than at Bicetre, the population of which is composed of men,
-belonging to the poorest classes of society.
-
-We have only to consider the phenomena which attend and usually follow
-the venereal act, to infer that the spinal marrow may frequently
-be affected in consequence of the abuse of that act. Agitation,
-the involuntary contractions of the muscles, particularly of those
-surrounding the pelvis, and the tetanic spasm with which they are
-affected at the time of the ejaculation of the semen; the cramps
-which frequently attend it; the general feeling of pain, fatigue, and
-debility, which follows it--a feeling which is always more perceptible
-in the loins and lower part of the body, than elsewhere, indicate the
-powerful impression made on the spinal marrow, and the part which
-it takes in all going on. This participation is also demonstrated
-by different pathological facts, and by the results of experiments
-which we shall mention, when treating of the influence exercised by
-affections of the spinal marrow, as the cause of venereal excesses.
-
-The local symptoms of the medulla, in onanists, consist in different
-and more or less acute sensations felt along the vertebral column. At
-first, these sensations do not appear until after the act of venery,
-and pass off; they then continue a longer time; and finally become
-constant. The pain is generally of a dull character--inconvenient,
-rather than severe--which obliges the patient, when sitting or
-standing, to change his position frequently; and it is generally less
-perceptible, or even disappears, when the patient assumes a horizontal
-position. Sometimes there is a feeling as if of ants crawling over the
-body, descending from the head along the spine: this symptom was first
-noticed by Hippocrates. Sometimes, these sensations have a special
-character, which each patient expresses in his own manner: thus, a man
-who indulged night and morning, for two years, in coition, complained
-to me that he felt beatings constantly between his shoulders. Others
-say that they have a knot in the back. The pains in the spine are
-sometimes very severe; sometimes they are extremely sharp. Onanists,
-and individuals affected with pollutions, most generally complain of
-their loins.
-
-The frequent occurrence of the symptoms mentioned in persons exhausted
-by venereal excesses, has caused the terms _consumption_, phthisis
-dorsalis, and tabes dorsalis, to be applied to the state which they
-then present.
-
-The other symptoms of the affection of the spinal marrow are more
-or less severe pains--more or less distinct sensations of cold, of
-numbness, and formication in the limbs, particularly in the lower
-extremities; cramps; constant trembling, or convulsive motions in these
-parts; a kind of tetanic stiffness; gradual debility of the lower half
-of the body; and, finally, paraplegia. We shall find these symptoms, in
-addition to the other effects of masturbation, in cases to be mentioned.
-
-Pains in the loins and extremities were very marked in an individual
-of whom Serrurier remarks as follows:--“A patient whom I attended
-was reduced to a most dreadful state of marasmus, in consequence of
-nocturnal pollutions, determined by venereal excesses. I prescribed
-a tonic mode of treatment, and varied it in every form; but the
-patient died, after four months of frightful pains in the loins and
-articulations.” There was apparently, in this case, an affection of
-the lumbar part of the medulla, or of its membranes. A similar malady
-existed, probably, in a man whose case was published by Hattè, and who
-was affected, in consequence of excesses in coition, with a lumbago,
-which alternated with satyriasis. There is no doubt, in regard to
-the affection of the spinal marrow, in the following case related
-by Van Swieten:--“For three years” says he, “I used all the aids of
-medicine for a young man, who, in consequence of onanism, was affected
-with general wandering pains--with a sensation, sometimes of heat,
-sometimes of cold, which was extremely unpleasant, over the whole body,
-but particularly in the loins. After a time, these pains diminished
-slightly; and then the thighs and legs were so cold, that although
-these parts, on being touched, seemed to preserve their natural heat,
-yet he was constantly warming himself at the fire, even during the
-warmer days of summer. I observed, particularly, a constant rotation of
-the testicles in the scrotum; and the patient felt a similar motion in
-the loins, which was very troublesome to him.”
-
-Was the spinal marrow perfectly healthy in the onanist who wrote to
-Tissot the following:--“My nerves are extremely weak. My hands have no
-strength: they tremble constantly, and perspire freely. I have violent
-pains in my stomach, arms, and legs; and sometimes in the kidneys,
-chest,” &c. Persuaded, also, from a great many cases, that most of
-the pains termed rheumatic are neuralgic, and that many neuralgias
-depend on an affection of the spinal marrow; I think there is reason to
-suspect this affection, whenever it is found in onanists.
-
-The following case, related by Dr. Bertini of Turin, presents, as a
-principal symptom, convulsive trembling of the lower extremities. The
-disease commenced, as is frequently the case, under the influence of an
-accidental cause; but when this had occurred, the patient presented for
-a long time symptoms of an affection of the medulla; and it is evident
-that their origin must be ascribed to onanism.
-
-The patient was twenty-eight years old, and of a lymphatic-bilious
-temperament. When twelve years of age, he became addicted to
-masturbation, and then began to perceive tremblings in the arms and
-legs, vertigo, and pains in the head. He continued his fatal habit till
-twenty-two years old. At the beginning of August, 1824, he was attacked
-with a tertian intermittent, but for this he took no medicine. On the
-20th of the same month, while cutting wood in Sesia, and while in a
-profuse perspiration, he went in swimming. He soon felt a sensation
-of shivering, followed by cold, spasms, vertigo, pain in the head,
-and thirst; aversion to food, difficulty of respiration, sensation
-of oppression in the sacrolumbar region, constipation, pains, and
-trembling in the lower extremities. These latter symptoms became so
-urgent, that the patient was obliged to have advice. In this state,
-he was carried to the hospital of Vercelli; and in a few days he was
-bled eleven times, and drastic purgatives were administered without
-success. A month afterward, he left the hospital; and since that time,
-the man has become a beggar and an object of public commiseration. The
-18th of October, at which time he came under the charge of Dr. Bertini,
-he presented the following symptoms: he had no fever, nor pains in
-the head, nor derangement in the intellectual faculties; but he had a
-pain in the two sides of the sacrolumbar region, which was increased
-by pressure. The patient complained, also, of a kind of formication in
-the legs and feet, which parts, as also the rest of the body, trembled
-constantly: the agitation was so great, that the patient could not rest
-in bed, nor sit without support. Twenty-five leeches were applied to
-the lumbar region, and these drew about twelve ounces of blood. The
-trembling diminished, and the patient could soon rise and walk without
-a stick, and in fact without assistance. From this time, he felt no
-pains nor trembling, and he left the hospital eight days afterward. Dr.
-Bertini has since seen him, and he was well. (_Revue Med._, Dec. 1825.)
-
-The tetanic form of the disease of the spinal marrow has rarely been
-observed as arising from onanism. Tissot saw a case of it in a young
-man:--“The disease commenced with rigidity of the neck and spine; this
-extended successively to all the limbs; and the patient, for some
-time before death, was obliged to lie in bed on his face, unable to
-move either his feet or hands. All motion was impossible; and he was
-obliged even to be fed. He lived several weeks in this sad state; and
-died, or rather sunk away, almost without suffering.”
-
-Paralysis, which is the consequence of myelitis, or of any other
-affection of the spinal marrow, has been seen much more frequently
-than tetanus, in onanists. It is most generally confined to the lower
-parts of the body; but if the disease be seated in the cervical portion
-of the spinal marrow, the four extremities may be paralyzed. This was
-seen in the case of a young man who was under the care of Dupuytren, in
-September, 1833:--
-
-This young man was twenty years old: he was very much addicted to
-masturbation, and his disease could be attributed to no other cause.
-This affection had existed for two years, when the patient entered
-Hotel Dieu. The attack of paralysis had been sudden, like a clap
-of thunder: the patient had lost the use of his limbs suddenly.
-The muscles of the neck were paralyzed, and the head fell in any
-direction: a short time before, however, the patient had recovered
-the power of sustaining it. The paralysis of the four limbs, also,
-varied in degree, alternately increasing and diminishing. After the
-patient entered the hospital, it was not equal on both sides: thus,
-he had some power over his left arm, but not over his right arm. Both
-the upper limbs, also, were atrophied, or wasted: those of the right
-side more so, however, than those of the left. Many remedies had been
-tried for this patient, but without success. At the time the case was
-published, purgatives and moxas were proposed. Dupuytren remarked to
-his pupils, that the situation of the myelitis corresponded in this
-young man to the cervical vertebræ; and that, if it ascended a little,
-and extended to the origin of the diaphragmatic nerve, it would cause
-death. He regarded the passion for masturbation, which existed in this
-young man, as the probable cause of this myelitis; and, consequently,
-of an atrophy of the anterior roots of the spinal nerves. (_Lancette
-Française_, 1833, p. 339.)
-
-The disorganization, also, occupied an elevated portion of the
-spinal marrow, in the following case stated by Tissot:--“I was called
-upon,” says he, “to visit in the country a man, forty years old, who
-had been very strong and robust, but who had indulged excessively
-in sexual commerce and in wine, and who had been often engaged in
-athletic exercises. He began to be affected, a few months since, by a
-weakness in his legs, which made him totter in his walk, as if drunk.
-He sometimes fell, when walking on a plane; he could not descend
-the stairs without much difficulty; and hardly dared to leave his
-apartment. His hands trembled very much; he wrote with very great
-difficulty, and very badly; but he dictated with ease, although his
-speech, which had never been very fluent, began to be less so. His
-memory was still good; and the only ground for suspecting a lesion
-in his mind was the want of attention at the _jeu de dames_, and the
-change of countenance. His appetite was good, and he slept well; but it
-was difficult for him to turn in bed.
-
-It occurred to me that his gallantries, and a too free use of wine,
-were the first causes of the disease; and that his athletic exercises,
-in which he had been frequently engaged, were the origin of the
-particular affection of the muscles. The season was not favorable for
-the use of remedies; but it was necessary to attempt to arrest the
-progress of the disease. I advised frictions of the whole body with
-flannels, and some tonics. I directed the doses to be increased, and
-to add also the use of the cold bath, at the commencement of summer.
-In a few weeks, the trembling of the hands seemed to be a little
-diminished. A consultation was had in the month of April: the disease
-was attributed to his having written some months, two years since,
-in a chamber recently plastered. Warm baths--oily frictions, with
-diaphoretic and anti-spasmodic powders, were employed without benefit.
-In the month of June, in a second consultation, he was advised to visit
-the medicinal spring of Leuk, in Valais. On his return, the trembling
-and stiffness had increased. From this time, (Sept. 1760, to Jan.
-1764,) I saw him but three or four times. In 1762, he procured from
-Frankfort the remedies mentioned in the English treatise, _Onania_,
-which were of no use. He consulted a foreign physician the last year
-with as little success. The disease has slowly, but daily progressed;
-and for several months before death, his legs were too weak to support
-the weight of his body. He could not move his hands nor arms without
-help; his speech was so embarrassed, and his voice so feeble, that
-it was difficult to understand him; the extensor muscles of the head
-allowed it to fall continually on the chest; he had constant pains in
-the loins; his sleep and appetite were sensibly diminished. During the
-last few months of his life, there was much difficulty in swallowing;
-after Christmas, there came on an irregular fever, and his eyes were
-singularly dim; when I saw him in the month of January, he passed
-the whole day and most of the night reclining on a sofa, with his
-feet in a chair, with a domestic constantly in attendance near him,
-in order to change his position, raise his head to feed him, and to
-listen attentively to all he said. As he approached the period of his
-dissolution, he was obliged to articulate letter by letter, which
-was written down as it was pronounced. Seeing that I gave him no
-encouragement, as I only employed some palliatives for his fever and
-oppression, and actuated by a desire of living, he sent one of his
-friends to tell me the cause to which he attributed all these symptoms,
-viz., _masturbation_; that he commenced this infamous practice several
-years since; had continued it as long as possible; and that he had
-perceived his difficulties increase, in proportion to his indulgence in
-it. He confirmed this statement a few days afterward; and it was this
-which induced him to use the remedies recommended in _Onania_.”
-
-This case shows us paralysis confined at first to the abdominal limbs,
-but extending afterward to the upper part of the body. We find a
-similar case of this progression, in a case related by Olivier, of
-Angers:--
-
-“M--, of a sanguine temperament, of a strong constitution, and of
-a lively and gay character, had always enjoyed good health until
-seventeen years old, when he unfortunately became addicted to
-masturbation. He soon languished, and grew debilitated. Having,
-however, conquered this fatal habit, his strength gradually returned,
-and a proper regimen soon restored him to his former vigor. When
-twenty years old, he perceived a marked debility in the motions of
-the articulation of the right foot; but this disappeared: he was then
-affected twice with blenorrhagia, the last attack of which continued
-for several months.
-
-“When twenty-five years old, he again indulged in masturbation, and
-similar symptoms to those first presented soon appeared: the lower
-extremities, also, became weakened; at times, also, the sensibility of
-the skin was obtuse, and even lost; but it soon reappeared. Under the
-influence of remedies, the weakness in the limbs diminished slightly.
-M-- could walk three quarters of an hour without resting, but he could
-not stand longer; his legs, which were evidently wasted, refusing to
-sustain him. He was extremely costive; and since the last attack of
-blenorrhagia, the excretion of urine was painful.
-
-“This affection remained stationary for several years, and then
-became more serious: the patient was now twenty-nine years old. At
-this period, the paraplegia became complete. He could not walk, nor
-even support himself on crutches; his lower limbs were often stiff;
-both arms, also, were at times insensible; and sometimes the sense of
-touch was blunted. The wasting away had increased; the excretion of
-urine was often involuntary, and the constipation was habitual. He was
-somewhat benefited by Hallé’s prescriptions, consisting in frictions
-with cantharides, and douches to the spine; but the next year the evil
-increased, the sensibility in the hands diminished, and there was
-difficulty in moving the right hand.
-
-“Eighteen months afterward, the lower extremities became perfectly
-paralyzed: they were less warm than the rest of the body; yet, when
-cold water was applied to them, it produced a burning sensation. The
-right arm, forearm, and hand, often felt fatigue: its motions were
-less free, and the patient sometimes found it difficult to write. The
-limb of the opposite side was not affected. The disease of the bladder,
-which had existed for several years, was also increased.
-
-“Paralysis, during the following years, progressed slowly, but
-constantly. The arm of the right side lost its motion entirely; the
-forearm was flexed upon it, and retained this position. At a later
-period, the fingers became stiff, crooked, and they continued to be
-so flexed, that a tampon of linen was placed on the palm of the hand,
-to prevent the nails from lacerating the skin. A singular symptom,
-also, appeared: if the internal part of the thigh was gently rubbed,
-the limbs extended quickly, as if by a galvanic shock, and then
-resumed their first position, which was that of a permanent state of
-semiflexion.
-
-The paralysis finally affected the left upper extremity, which had
-hitherto been free from it; at the same time, the respiration became
-more difficult, the voice more feeble, and speech more painful, so
-that the patient choked, after talking a few moments. These different
-symptoms, and those described above, gradually became intense; and
-at the time this case was recorded, the patient was still alive--but
-in a most lamentable situation. Very severe pains supervened in the
-right side; the limbs were frequently convulsed; the constipation was
-obstinate; the urine passed involuntarily; the intellectual faculties,
-however, remained unaffected; and the patient, who was then fifty
-years old, proved, by his easy and agreeable conversation, that,
-notwithstanding his unfortunate situation, he had lost none of his
-natural gayety of character.” (_Traité de la moelle epinière_, &c.,
-vol. ii., p. 594.)
-
-The lower part of the medulla alone was affected in an individual whose
-case is mentioned by Tissot.
-
-In another case related by Weszpremi, the spinal marrow and brain
-were affected. The patient, who was thirty years old, complained of
-pains along the spine, especially when he stooped. His legs were so
-weak, that he could scarcely stand erect for a moment; his memory
-was considerably weakened, and he seemed stupid; his sight was also
-affected, and he was extremely thin. This man, having long denied the
-cause of his disease, finally confessed it. After some months, his
-health was restored. (_Observ. Med._, p. 175.)
-
-The disease is not always confined to the spinal marrow, and
-its membranes: it frequently extends to the parts adjacent, and
-particularly to the vertebræ. The latter are then destroyed; and the
-disease described by Pott, and which takes his name, appears. Sabatier
-was aware of the influence of masturbation on the bony part of the
-vertebral column. “The most terrible and most frequent results of
-onanism,” says he, in a letter to M. A. Petit, “are nodosities of the
-spine. My opinion has always been regarded as unfounded, on account of
-the youth of the patients; but I was enlightened by the admission of
-some of my patients, that many were guilty of this thing before their
-sixteenth year.” This fact, which was afterward stated by Boyer, in his
-lectures, is now no longer doubted. The relation, however, between the
-caries of the bodies of the vertebræ in onanists, and the affection of
-the medulla, or of its membranes, had not been observed; it had not
-been remarked that this latter always precedes caries, which in this
-case is only the result of the extension of the primitive disease. The
-facts which are to be stated will prove this to be true.
-
-L. E. G., twenty-one years old, a turner, of a lymphatic temperament,
-of a slender and delicate constitution, addicted to masturbation
-from childhood, experienced, at the beginning of February, 1825, a
-slight pain in the epigastric region, difficulty of digestion, and
-constipation: he also had laborious breathing, caused by palpitations,
-which were much increased by walking, and particularly by going up
-stairs.
-
-On entering the hospital la Pitié, April 28th, 1825, this young man
-presented all the symptoms of a hypertrophy of the left cavities
-of the heart: these phenomena, which diminished after a few days,
-were followed by symptoms of enteritis and peritonitis, which were
-attributed to excesses in eating. During the continuance of this
-latter affection, the patient complained of uncommon debility in the
-abdominal limbs. These symptoms disappeared; and when it was expected
-to see the patient convalescent, he was affected with complete
-paraplegia. He lost the use of his legs: they, however, retained their
-sensibility. As motion in them was lost, this sensibility was even
-increased; for the patient cried whenever he was touched, or when
-the position of the lower limbs was changed. The bladder was soon
-paralyzed, and the sound was used, which caused inflammation of this
-organ. A broad and deep eschar, followed by ulceration, laid bare
-the whole posterior part of the pelvis. From this time, the symptoms
-increased more and more, and the patient died the 11th of August, about
-six weeks after the first symptoms appeared.
-
-On opening the body, a softened tubercle was found on the surface
-of the right hemisphere of the brain; _the body of the third dorsal
-vertebra was slightly changed_; the corresponding portion of the dura
-mater presented a cancerous degenerescence, which extended from the
-body of the third dorsal to that of the fifth cervical vertebra. The
-bodies of all the vertebræ connected with this alteration were whitish,
-and slightly softened. The tissue of the spinal marrow was softened,
-especially on the level with the seventh cervical and first three
-dorsal vertebræ: the softening occupied the anterior cords, which were
-of a grayish white color; the posterior cords were slightly softened
-but only on a level with the first three dorsal vertebræ The lungs
-were healthy and crepitating; the right contained superiorly a small
-softened tubercle. _The heart was healthy_: its size was normal; the
-left cavities possessed their usual size and thickness. Traces of
-inflammation were found in the peritoneum, intestines, and bladder.
-(_Journal de Physiol. Experim._ July, 1825.)
-
-In this case, we see in a measure the mode in which caries of the
-vertebræ is produced. This caries is only at its commencement; the
-vertebræ are affected superficially, and in those parts only which
-correspond to the diseased portions of the dura mater and medulla.
-There are none of the local symptoms of Pott’s disease--no collapse of
-the vertebral column--no gibbosity; yet the paraplegia appeared, as
-in the cases where these alterations exist: it resulted, then, from
-the softening of the medulla, or the alteration of its membranes. If
-a little time had elapsed, and several spinous processes had deviated
-from their true direction, this paralysis would have been attributed
-to the commencement and progress of this deviation. These relations
-between the state of the medulla and that of the vertebræ have been
-already remarked by several authors. M. Latour, in a memoir inserted
-among those of the Society of Emulation, has sought to establish that
-paraplegia, in Pott’s disease, resulted from a primitive alteration of
-the medulla. Janson has since expressed a similar opinion. Cases have
-also been published by Louis, which leave little doubt on this subject.
-(_Mem. and Recherches_, 1826, p. 410.)
-
-One symptom in the preceding case, which deserves to be noted, is the
-difficulty of respiration, the palpitations, and other symptoms which
-led to the belief that the heart was diseased. On opening the body,
-however, this organ was found perfectly healthy. Similar phenomena are
-often seen in onanists: it would therefore be wrong to consider them
-always as signs of an organic alteration of the heart and large vessels.
-
-In the following case, the vertebræ were more changed. The spinal
-column was gibbous: but this was preceded by paraplegia, and other
-symptoms of myelitis. This case was published by M. Dalandeterie:--
-
-A shoemaker, twenty-four years old, of good constitution, who has
-always enjoyed good health, contracted the habit of masturbation at the
-age of sixteen years, and became so addicted to it, that he indulged
-seven or eight times a-day: his strength soon diminished, and he lost
-flesh and his color.
-
-After an interruption, caused by an acute disease, the patient resumed
-his fatal habit with the same earnestness. He finally became so weak;
-languid, and pale, that he was discharged from military service, in
-which he was inscribed.
-
-A little while afterward, this young man, who had never shown any
-symptoms of scrofula, presented scrofulous engorgements in the groins
-and axillæ, and swellings, with caries, in several phalanges of the
-fingers. At the same time, a singular phenomenon appeared: the hair,
-which was chestnut colored, came off; on growing again, it appeared
-of several colors: but after coming off once or twice, it resumed its
-natural shade.
-
-The patient continuing to indulge in onanism, finally became extremely
-weak, and was obliged to keep his bed. Marked symptoms of myelitis
-now appeared. The patient gradually lost the use of his lower limbs:
-first they became weak, and showed a disposition to be crossed; but
-finally wasted away, and lost the power of motion. He was now obliged
-even to be turned in bed, as he could not move. The articulation of
-the feet and knees became stiff and inflexible, and his legs were so
-much retracted, that the end of the foot only touched the ground, when
-the patient was placed in an erect position. The sensibility of the
-limbs, also, was as much affected as their motions; they were cold,
-numb, and even when pinched they were not painful. The general languor
-was increased every day. He suffered from thirst, dyspepsia, pains in
-the stomach, rumblings, night sweats, &c. At this period, the patient
-quitted a woman with whom he had lived for a year, and who, having but
-little inclination for coition, caused him to indulge in masturbation.
-
-The erections were frequent, powerful, short, and always terminated
-with a more or less abundant discharge of mucus from the
-urethra--perhaps, also from the prostate gland; or even the discharge
-might be of thin semen. After a while, the ejaculations were composed,
-instead of semen, of a half-clotted, blackish or yellowish blood:
-sometimes, as much as a tablespoonful was lost. These emissions were
-always painful, and were followed by extreme prostration.
-
-For some time, the patient was in this sad state, when he experienced
-a crawling sensation, like that caused by ants, descending along the
-back: he experienced, in the same region, a severe and fatiguing pain,
-which extended into the ribs and loins. These symptoms subsided; but
-at the lower part of the dorsal region appeared a hard tumor, which
-at first was small; but it gradually enlarged, as long as the patient
-continued to masturbate. This tumor was evidently formed by the curve
-of the spine, and the projection of three spinous processes.
-
-In three months, the patient was improved by the use of moxas and of
-antiscrofulous remedies, by a suitable regimen, and particularly by
-abstaining from onanism, for which he had conceived not only disgust,
-but even a horror. The abdominal limbs regained their strength, heat,
-and sensibility; the patient could walk on crutches, and could even
-stand erect for a few moments, and could take a few steps unaided.
-
-In this case, which is remarkable in more than one respect, the
-symptoms of myelitis preceded the curve of the spine, and then
-disappeared, although the spine did not regain its primitive
-rectitude. The debility, numbness, retraction, and paralysis of the
-limbs, appeared long before the pain in the back, after which the
-curve in the back began to appear; and then these limbs regained
-their sensibility, force, and motion, while the gibbosity remained
-always the same. This curve, then, could not be the cause of the
-paraplegia, because the latter appeared first, and the spine remained
-curved after the paralysis was removed. The development of symptoms
-apparently scrofulous, in a man more than twenty years old, who had
-hitherto presented nothing analogous, and whose parents were healthy;
-the loss of his hair; the affection of the seminal passages, and the
-state of the genital organs, &c., &c.--facts to which we shall recur
-hereafter--all contribute to render this case interesting.
-
-We shall see, in the following case, also related by M. Dalandeterie,
-an instance of vertebral caries in an onanist:--
-
-A cook, forty-five years old, of bad constitution, but having always
-enjoyed robust health, indulged in masturbation, although not to
-very great excess. Eighteen months before his case was published,
-he perceived pains and weakness in the loins, frequent colics,
-often followed by brownish dejections, and sometimes by obstinate
-constipation. He suffered, too, from flatulency; and in the left haunch
-there was a pain, which increased or diminished with this flatulence.
-
-The patient, notwithstanding the progress of these symptoms, continued
-to masturbate. Debility and pains in his loins extended into the
-abdominal limbs, and increased so much, that he was obliged to keep
-his bed: he could only lie on his left side; but in this position his
-motions were easy. The diminution in the natural heat, the livid color
-of the skin, the softness and flaccidity of the flesh, debility, loss
-of sleep and of flesh, thirst, constipation, &c., were added to the
-symptoms already mentioned.
-
-At the same time, a hard, indolent tumor, the size of a pullet’s egg,
-was formed at the lower part of the dorsal region. This tumor, which
-did not enlarge, evidently resulted from the prominence of the spinous
-processes, and consequently from a curve in the spine, which was
-doubtless caused by a softening of the bodies of the vertebræ.
-
-Nearly at the same period, there was developed, at the lower part
-of the sternum, a hard, indolent tumor; the color of the skin was
-unchanged: it gradually became the size of a nut, suppurated, and
-assumed the appearance of a scrofulous ulcer. The lymphatic ganglions
-of the neck, which were somewhat swelled, now returned to their natural
-size. The treatment was similar to that used in the former case, and
-was attended with the same result: the strength, bodily heat, and
-appetite returned. Finally, the patient was able to walk with crutches;
-and could stand, unsupported, for a few moments.
-
-The circumstances in this case are not detailed with sufficient
-accuracy, to enable us to follow exactly the cause of the symptoms. We
-would remark, however, that one of these seen first was the neuralgic
-pains, which extended from the loins into the lower extremities. Now,
-as this symptom belongs to irritation of the medulla or its membranes,
-more than to their compression, there is reason to think that this
-irritation preceded the curve of the spine. In this patient, also, as
-in the preceding case, the affection of the marrow had not so much
-influence in causing the destruction of the bodies of the vertebræ, as
-a disposition to caries--a disposition which was evidently increased by
-onanism, and which appeared at the same time in several bones.
-
-The following case, from Meyrieu, is not sufficiently detailed, to
-affect in any manner the question, how caries of the vertebræ is
-produced in onanists; but it is interesting, as it shows that the
-disease may extend to the soft parts which cover or are adjacent to the
-affected vertebræ.
-
-L--, twenty-two years old, was moderately tall, with a narrow chest,
-and had never enjoyed good health, particularly for the six years
-preceding the time when he entered the prison at Bicetre, when he
-indulged in the disgusting practice of onanism. In the course of
-January, 1819, he was affected with general numbness, with frequent
-cough and expectoration of mucus: these symptoms were occasionally
-attended with slight fever. When admitted to the infirmary, the 1st of
-February, he complained, in addition to the symptoms already mentioned,
-of a violent pain in the posterior part of the neck. A slight swelling
-was seen at the level of the first and second cervical vertebræ, and
-pressure on that part was painful; the head was bent to the left side,
-and remained motionless; the thoracic abdominal limbs were numb; and
-deglutition was painful. Local resolvent frictions, blisters, and moxas
-were used. The 15th of February, he was affected with hemoptysis,
-which yielded in two days to the use of bleeding and astringents.
-The vertebral disease, however, generally made progress, like that
-of the chest, which seemed to relax. In July, the thoracic limbs
-were perfectly paralyzed; and in August, this was true also of the
-abdominal limbs. At this period, the head was absolutely immoveable;
-the phthisis seemed as yet in the second degree. Finally, the patient
-died suddenly, from moving his head, while the attendants were changing
-him.
-
-_Post-mortem Examination._ The soft parts of the posterior region of
-the neck were changed to a whitish, lardaceous substance; the right
-condyle of the occipital bone was carious: there was also a deep caries
-of the upper part of the right lateral mass of the first vertebræ, and
-of the odontoid process. The transverse and odontoid ligaments were
-degenerated and softened; and the medulla oblongata presented a kind
-of strangulation, resulting from the compression caused by the left
-posterior part of the edge of the occipital foramen: in fact, there
-was a dislocation of this bone, on the first vertebræ. The cerebrum
-was unaffected; the right lung was tuberculous, and very small; that
-of the left side was also tuberculous, but was larger. The peritoneum
-presented some marks of inflammation.
-
-In the preceding cases, the caries of the vertebræ was not attended
-with a congested abscess. The following case, published by Levêque
-Lasource, will present to us this symptom, which is so common in this
-disease:--
-
-N-- O-- was addicted to onanism, from twelve to eighteen years of age;
-but could not renounce this fatal habit, although reminded of its
-danger by a curve in the spine, and by other symptoms. When received
-at la Charité Hospital, in 1806, beside a well marked gibbosity, he
-presented a congested abscess at the upper and inner part of the thigh.
-Two cauteries were applied to the sides of the vertebral prominences:
-these suppurated freely, but did no good. The abscess was punctured
-in several places. This young man, who could not survive, left the
-hospital; so that the organic changes produced by his disease could not
-be verified. (_Jour. de Med., Chir. and Phar._; vol. xvii., p. 261.)
-
-The same author has related another case, which terminated more
-fortunately:--A child, seven or eight years old, addicted to
-masturbation, entered at la Charité, affected with gibbosity and
-paralysis of the lower limbs. During the month he stayed in the
-hospital, several cauteries were applied around the tumor, which
-suppurated; tonics and strengthening medicines were administered
-internally. He left, perfectly cured of the paralysis, and of the other
-symptoms caused by the affection of the medulla; but the deformity
-resulting from the prominence formed by the spinous processes of the
-vertebræ continued. Three years after, this child, who had abstained
-from this bad habit, had experienced no relapse.
-
-We have seen, in several of the preceding cases, that permanent
-contractions of the lower limbs resulted, in onanists, from affections
-of the spinal marrow. Guersent, also, admits the possibility of
-essential contractions--that is, those which do not result from a
-disease of the nervous centres. According to this practitioner, these
-kinds of contractions are seen most frequently in those nervous
-children who indulge in bad habits, like that of masturbation. The
-following case has been considered by him as an instance of this
-affection:--
-
-D-- E--, five years old, and addicted to masturbation, after passing
-a part of the winter at the Hospital des Enfans, to be treated for
-scrofulous engorgements of the glands of the neck, was sent to the
-country in the spring. He had been there about three months, when he
-was suddenly affected with a contraction of the lower extremities.
-Examined the 5th of July, he complained neither of pain in the head
-nor spine. The digestive passages were in very good state; there was
-no derangement in the circulation or respiration; the muscles of
-the lower extremities were permanently rigid: the tension, however,
-was more marked in the adductors; for the patient constantly kept
-his knees crossed. There was no deviation in the vertebral column.
-Different remedies were employed, but without success; except a little
-improvement under the use of carbonate of iron. The legs and thighs
-of the patient could be flexed and extended with the hands; but he
-could neither flex them when extended, nor extend them when flexed.
-This child was cured in a singular manner. His state was as described,
-when, at the beginning of September, he was affected with symptoms
-of roseola. The contraction of the lower extremities disappeared,
-when the fever came on. The eruption went through its course, and the
-contraction of the limbs did not return. Thus, this disease, which
-had resisted several efficacious remedies, disappeared before another
-disease.
-
-The loss or debility of the external senses, particularly those of
-hearing and sight, when this state is the consequence of venereal
-excesses, often result, as may be seen in several of the cases above
-stated, from a disease of the brain. This organ was probably diseased
-in the old man whose case was mentioned by Réveillé Parise. This man
-was desirous of living with a young Italian girl, whose temperament
-was extremely ardent. He paid for his imprudence by blindness, which
-occurred in eight days, and which was followed by death. Sometimes,
-however, the eye alone is diseased: at least, the pathological
-state which it presents is unattended by any symptoms indicating an
-affection of the brain or its membranes. Many libertines present only
-an irritation of the conjunctiva and of the edge of the eyelids. It is
-a sort of chronic ophthalmia; their eyes are red, watery, fatigued,
-painful; and they cannot engage in the evening in any occupation,
-such as reading, which requires the attention to be confined to one
-object. Sometimes, a severe and deep-seated pain proves that, beside
-the outer parts of the eye, the interior of this organ is the seat of
-a severe irritation. Hoffmann has seen several cases of this. He cites
-that of a young man, who indulged in onanism from the age of fifteen
-to that of twenty-three. “His eyes and head were so weak,” says he,
-“that these organs were often affected with violent spasms, during the
-emission of semen. Whenever he attempted to read, he experienced a
-sensation similar to that of drunkenness: the pupil was considerably
-dilated, and excessive pains were felt in the eye. The eyelids were
-glued together every night; the eyes were also watery; and there was,
-at the two angles, a collection of whitish matter. These irritations,
-especially when seated within the eye, may be followed by the loss
-of sight.” Dr. Juengken, professor of clinical ophthalmology at the
-Berlin faculty, and who has published an excellent work on the diseases
-of the eye, indicates, when speaking of amaurosis resulting from
-masturbation, that the pupil assumes a peculiar form, which is found
-only (says this professor) in those individuals habitually addicted to
-this vice. In these cases, the pupil, instead of being in the centre of
-the eye, is removed upward, but does not lose its roundness: the upper
-part of the iris seems narrower, and contracted on its ciliary edge.
-This symptom has been mentioned, also, by Dr. Sichel, as occurring in
-certain scrofulous ophthalmias: iritis then exists. Photophobia, which
-is a greater or less aversion to light, resulting from the pain which
-it occasions in the eye, has been indicated, by Sanson, as sometimes
-preceding amaurosis, caused by too frequent a loss of semen.
-
-All authors agree in placing venereal excesses, and particularly
-those from masturbation, among the causes of amaurosis. They are so
-unanimous on this point, that we shall cite no authorities. They
-generally agree to regard amaurosis, in onanists, as produced by the
-exhaustion caused by diurnal or nocturnal pollutions. Beer, and many
-others, assimilate, in this respect, the loss of semen to that of other
-fluids; and compares venereal excesses, especially those from onanism,
-with cholera, diarrhœa, &c., as a cause of amaurosis. This idea of
-exhaustion probably led Scarpa to remark, that amaurosis, resulting
-from premature abuses of masturbation or coition, must generally be
-regarded as incurable. This prognosis may be made, we believe, in
-regard to most cases of amaurosis. Dr. Buzzi has published, with four
-other cases of amaurosis, which were cured, that of an individual in
-whom it had been produced by masturbation. It, however, yielded, on the
-abandonment of bad habits, to the moderate use of good wine, combined
-with milk diet.
-
-Dr. Rognetta, in a memoir on the causes of amaurosis, insists on
-the opinion that onanism produces this disease, by exhausting the
-sensibility of the body. He compares this habit to decay. “Nothing,”
-says he, “enervates the body so much as too frequent emissions of
-semen, especially when they are caused by the hand: the spasm which
-attends them throws the body into all the infirmities of old age. The
-retina and optic nerve then gradually lose their sensitive faculty,
-which finally becomes extinct. Those who masturbate are affected with
-amaurosis, like decrepit old men.” Rognetta adds, that he has the
-notes of several cases of amaurosis, which had resisted all remedies,
-and which were caused entirely by the _luxuria manuensis_. He relates
-the history of a young ecclesiastic, nineteen years old, a native of
-Palermo, whose sight became very weak. This unfortunate young man had
-been in the habit of masturbating seven times a-day: he was also prone
-to sodomy. Rognetta advised him to leave off this bad habit, and to
-return to his native place and take cold baths.
-
-Sanson, also, places voluntary and involuntary pollutions among the
-asthenic causes of amaurosis: he, however, regards these pollutions as
-sometimes causing irritation of the retina. He assimilates them, as do
-many other authors, to all abundant discharges of fluids. The following
-case has been considered by him as one of asthenic amaurosis, produced
-in this manner:--A notary’s clerk, twenty-four years old, experienced
-for a year a progressive debility in his sight. He had labored much at
-night, by lamp-light, and attributed his disease to this cause; but
-another, which had contributed to the development of the amaurosis,
-was the excesses of this young man, in onanism and coition. Venereal
-disease, which he had contracted, might also contribute to this bad
-result. The pupil was dilated; the iris was immoveable; the eye was
-perfectly clear; and the retina, of a dull color, could be seen through
-the pupil. An antivenereal treatment, purgatives, emetics, and
-blisters around the organ, &c., produced no effect.
-
-In my opinion, blindness from amaurosis, being not so much a disease as
-a symptom, or rather the consequence, of many other diseases, is not,
-in onanists, the result of exhaustion, of asthenia, any more than the
-debility and paralysis of the lower extremities are, when the spinal
-marrow is diseased. Besides, what difference does it make, how the
-sight is lost in onanists? the most essential thing to be known is,
-that they can lose it. This unfortunate circumstance is to be dreaded
-by those whose sight is much affected during the act of venery, and
-who remain, as it were, in a mist for a few moments after this act.
-Thus, amaurosis was predicted in a public girl, whose case is mentioned
-by Hoffmann, and whose sight was obscured whenever she had connexion
-with men. She finally became blind. (_De morbis ex nim. ven._, § 26.)
-The sight is rarely lost suddenly: it commonly fades away gradually;
-and the onanist, if he can understand this warning, may, by abandoning
-his bad habits in time, preserve the vigor he still possesses; and,
-sometimes, even may recover what he has lost.
-
-The weakness and loss of sight, and the other affections of the eye
-already mentioned, are not the only ones which may arise from excessive
-onanism or coition: the muscles of the eye may also be affected. Lorry
-was, we believe, the first to notice this fact. “The eyes,” says he,
-“are affected with convulsive and spasmodic motions, after venereal
-excesses, rather than with blindness.” He states, that strabismus
-may be caused by onanism. We have before stated the case of a young
-man, whose eyes were affected with violent spasms at the moment of a
-discharge of semen. Demours has observed similar facts. “Masturbation,”
-says he, “affects the optic nerves, and also acts on the motor nerves
-of the eye.” He admits that he can see no reason for this. The same
-author mentions venereal excesses among the different causes of partial
-paralysis of the muscles of the eye.
-
-We have already mentioned the wandering pains, which frequently affect
-onanists; we have also alluded to those which depend on an affection of
-the spinal marrow. We have reason to think, from our own observations,
-and the statements particularly of English authors, that the number of
-pains dependent on an affection of the spinal marrow is much larger
-than is generally thought: we think, that most of the pains termed
-rheumatic, particularly those affecting the trunk and the limbs, are
-neuralgic; and that most of these neuralgias proceed from an irritation
-of the medulla or its membranes. We do not say that the spinal cord
-is always affected then, as in those cases of myelitis which attend
-paralysis and death: we think that it is affected in some manner;
-and that these pains, which are commonly so severe, and frequently
-so general--sometimes attended with tumefaction, but more frequently
-without it--which are felt in the course of these nerves, are the usual
-consequences of this affection. Hence, it is not surprising, that the
-act of venery, which excites the nervous system so much--which has so
-marked an action on the spinal marrow, has frequently predisposed to
-neuralgic or rheumatic pains, and has directly caused or increased this
-kind of pains. It is well ascertained, and many authors--particularly
-Hoffmann--have remarked, that those who indulge in onanism, during
-youth, are more subject to these pains than others. The act of venery,
-even when indulged in to a moderate extent, generally increases their
-violence. I have often seen attacks of neuralgia supervene immediately
-after coition. It was an affection of this kind which was felt by the
-onanist who wrote to Tissot, that he felt in his face a pain similar to
-that caused by applying a great number of pins.
-
-Individuals who have braved the usual causes of rheumatism with
-impunity, not unfrequently become vulnerable to these causes after
-venereal excesses. M. Villeneuve relates the case of a stonecutter,
-who had long been exposed to changes of weather without inconvenience,
-and who was violently attacked with rheumatism after unusual venereal
-excesses. He also mentions the case of a groom, who had long slept in
-a damp and narrow stable without suffering, but who was attacked with
-rheumatism the winter after his marriage. Saucerotte has seen a similar
-case: it was that of a man who had constantly braved the changes of
-weather, and who was affected with rheumatism after indulging in
-women and wine. The same author has established, in the memoir where
-this fact was reported, that muscular rheumatism is only a variety of
-neuralgia. Among the proofs which he gives of it, he states that many
-authors, as Barthez, Scudamore, Chaussier, Olivier, and Ferrus, have
-placed venereal excesses among the causes of neuralgias and those of
-rheumatism.
-
-Most authors have considered these excesses as one of the predisposing
-causes of gout. Hippocrates, probably, entertained the same idea, if we
-may judge from these two aphorisms:--“_Eunuchi neque podagra laborant,
-neque caluescunt. Puer podagra non tentatur ante venereorum usum._”
-Sydenham also regarded excessive indulgence in venereal pleasures as
-tending to produce gout. Guilbert remarks, that even hereditary gout
-is neither a disease of infancy nor of youth: he admits, however, that
-venereal excesses may produce it before the time it generally appears.
-Roche exclaims against this opinion: he thinks that venereal excesses
-can only cause attacks of gout. He says--
-
-“What influence have masturbation and venereal excesses in producing
-gout? According to men of the world, and even to some physicians, they
-are the most fruitful source of this infirmity: and yet on what facts
-does this opinion rest? On this, that several gouty people have been
-great libertines in their youth. But how many chaste persons, and how
-many prelates, too, are attacked by this cruel disease? On the other
-hand, are there not as many, and even more libertines among the poor,
-than among the rich? and yet, in general, they are not attacked by the
-gout. Finally, the shameful vice of onanism is observed most frequently
-among the young; and we have already said that gout is a disease of
-manhood and old age. Hence, it is wrong to attribute to this order of
-causes a part of the influence which it has not, and cannot have, in
-producing gout. Here, doubtless, has been committed the error which
-has been several times pointed out: attacks of gout have frequently
-been known to supervene after venereal excesses or masturbation; and
-it has been concluded that these causes concur powerfully in producing
-the disease itself. Good living and gormandizing are, we repeat, the
-real--the only sources of gout: sobriety, frugality, are the best
-preservatives from it.”
-
-This last phrase shows clearly the origin of Roche’s opinion. It is
-evident that he denies the influence attributed to venereal excesses,
-in the production of gout, only to sustain a favorite theory. Roche
-certainly never would have said, that there is more libertinism in the
-lower than in the higher walks of life, if he had not been preoccupied
-with the desire of proving that good living is the cause of gout,
-to the exclusion of every other cause. It may be asserted, that one
-mode of living predisposes to the gout more than another; and we will
-agree with every author, that this disease appears particularly in
-individuals who are well fed; but we cannot admit, that the possible
-action of certain influences, as that of venereal excesses, should be
-denied. Impressed, however, with the vast extent of the influence of
-venereal excesses, and with the uncertainty of its limits, we prefer to
-allow, with all authors, that venereal excesses, like many other known
-and unknown causes, may predispose to gout. This opinion seems to be
-more logical than that sustained by Roche with his usual ability.
-
-Roche, also, in accordance with other authors, regards venereal
-excesses as injurious to those affected with gout. “The indulgence in
-venereal pleasures,” says Barthez, “should seldom be permitted to those
-affected with gout; for they should abstain from whatever weakens or
-exhausts. Coste, who has written on gout, is much more formal. “A gouty
-person,” says he, “should choose between living apart from his wife,
-and being cured of his disease; or caressing her, and rendering his
-disease incurable. Whenever a gouty person sees a female,” he adds,
-“if young, a new root to his disease sprouts forth; and if he be old,
-he drives a nail into his coffin.” This opinion differs from that of
-Pietsch, who maintains that gout arises from the absorption of vitiated
-semen, which is retained by continence in the seminal vesicles.
-
-Can venereal excesses cause hemorrhoidal affections? For want of facts
-on this subject, we would remark, that these excesses _may_ contribute
-to develop these affections, and particularly the exacerbations to
-which they are subject. This was Montegre’s opinion: he admitted, that
-the nervous debility which resulted from the abuse of the genital
-organs, generally favored the occurrence of fluxes, motions which occur
-most frequently in people subject to hemorrhoids; and also, that in
-those females who have hemorrhoidal tumors on the rectum or vagina, the
-abuse of coition may excite inflammation of these tumors. Montegre,
-however, thinks that excessive continence has a more detrimental effect
-on those affected with hemorrhoids than the contrary. He thought that
-the irritation which extreme continence causes in the seminal vesicles
-and adjacent parts, may excite a hemorrhoidal paroxysm: hence, he
-regards the act of venery as generally useful to persons affected with
-hemorrhoids, provided it is confined within certain limits. On this
-opinion, we would say, that if the irritation of the seminal passages
-may extend to the adjacent passages, venereal excesses which produce
-this irritation may also cause inflammation of the hemorrhoidal tumors
-much more frequently than continence. This is the opinion of Begin,
-also, who mentions, among the direct causes of hemorrhoids, “excesses
-in venereal pleasures--excesses which are always attended with a state
-of orgasm and vascular fulness in the genital system, and in all the
-parts connected with it; and particularly in the lower region of the
-rectum, which receives the same vessels in the neck of the bladder,
-the prostate gland, and the seminal vesicles, in the male, and in the
-uterus and vagina in the female.”
-
-We may believe, from the enervating action of masturbation, that the
-development of scrofula may be excited or favored in those young
-patients who are addicted to it. Few proofs of this, however, are found
-in authors; and it is rare to find records of scrofulous symptoms in
-the histories of those onanists which have been published. It, however,
-would be absurd to conclude, from this silence, that the coincidence
-of these symptoms and the ordinary effects of onanism never occur, or
-that this habit cannot call into action a disposition to disease. But
-we must admit, that if masturbation be an active cause of this disease,
-this fact would have been noted more frequently.
-
-Further: Certain circumstances seem to indicate, that onanism must be
-but little favorable to the development of scrofula. First, onanism
-renders the limbs thinner, dries them, then deprives them of those
-white fluids with which the flesh of scrofulous persons is generally
-infiltrated. Next, since in these latter the sensibility is as it
-were blunted, and the susceptibility is slight, onanism tends to
-excite them. Besides, one of the most common effects of the action of
-the genital organs, at puberty, is the disappearance of scrofulous
-engorgements and other symptoms, if they exist. Sometimes, the normal
-development of the genital apparatus excites in those who have arrived
-at puberty the swelling of the lymphatic ganglions of the neck, axillæ,
-and particularly of the groins: but in this case, these ganglions
-are painful, and present a kind of inflammatory state, analogous to
-that which is attempted to be produced when they are affected with
-scrofulous engorgements. Cabanis has well described what then takes
-place:--“From the time,” says he, “that the evolution of the genital
-organs commences, there is a general motion in the whole lymphatic
-apparatus; the glands of the groins, the mammæ, those of the axillæ,
-and neck, swell: they often become painful. It is not only in girls
-that the mammæ swell; in young men, I have frequently seen them form
-tumors, which seemed inflammatory: they have often been considered as
-such by ignorant quacks. This symptom generally causes uneasiness in
-those who experience it: but this depends not so much on the pain,
-(which sometimes impedes the free motions of the body,) as on the
-influence of this new action--the commotion caused in the imagination
-by the new system.” This state of the lymphatic system would be, as is
-seen, rather antithetic, than analogous to what is seen in scrofulous
-patients. Farther: we have only to compare the eunuch with him who
-has vigorously passed through puberty, to see that the action of
-the genital organs is not adapted to favor the development of this
-affection.
-
-The act of venery often causes, also, ganglionary swellings; but they
-do not resemble scrofulous engorgements, more than those which arise
-from the influence of puberty. “The first essay of venereal pleasures,”
-says Cabanis, “is often necessary to complete the development of the
-genital organs: thus, the general swelling of all the parts where the
-glands are situated, especially of the bosom, of the anterior face
-of the neck, is often the consequence of this great commotion. The
-characters which manifest this swelling are much more remarkable in
-females; hence, perhaps, the old physicians, and even some moderns,
-have stated the sudden swelling of the neck in young girls as a sign of
-defloration. But it is wrong to consider this as a general and certain
-sign: it is certainly not one.” If the act of venery can produce such
-an excitement in the lymphatic system, it ought to be still more
-manifest when a part of this system is already inflamed. This is
-confirmed by a fact stated by Lordat, in the bulletin of the scientific
-society of Montpelier. It relates to a young woman, in whom the jugular
-glands being swelled, a few days after her marriage, increased or
-diminished in size, according as she yielded to her husband’s embraces
-or not. Thus, then, if we consider the genital organs, either during
-the acute period of their development, or when the act of venery is
-indulged in, we see that they extend their action to the lymphatic
-apparatus, as they do to the other systems; but in a manner which seems
-the reverse of that reputed to favor the production of scrofula.
-
-Symptoms, however, analogous to those caused by scrofula, have been
-known to occur where there is evidence of venereal abuses. Two cases,
-which we have already quoted from M. Dalandeterie, are instances of
-this. The first relates to a young man, twenty-four years old, whose
-health, before he was addicted to masturbation, had been good; and
-whose parents, so far as could be ascertained, had never been diseased
-with scrofula, and had never presented any disposition to the disease.
-First, he was affected with numbness in the little finger of the
-right hand, and the ring-finger of the left hand; the articulations
-swelled, and formed in these parts tumors, which were regarded as
-scrofulous, and which were soon followed by ulceration and caries. The
-patient experienced no pain; and only felt an intolerable itching. The
-lymphatic ganglions of the groin and axillæ were permanently swelled;
-and the bodies of several vertebræ became, as we have seen, affected
-with caries.
-
-The other patient, who was forty-five years old, presented an advanced
-case of myelitis, and caries of the vertebræ, when there formed, at the
-lower part of the sternum, a hard and indolent tumor, which soon became
-apparently a scrofulous ulcer. The pus from this ulcer was ichorous,
-and the edges were of a violet red, swelled and hard; and the soft
-parts adhered to the subjacent bones. The lymphatic ganglions of the
-neck swelled for some time, but they then returned to their natural
-state. M. Dalandeterie adds, that these two cases have been selected
-from many other similar or analogous facts: hence, he considers caries
-of the vertebræ as having then been the consequence of a scrofulous
-principle, which was developed by onanism.
-
-If, however, we carefully analyze these facts, we shall find that they
-do not indicate a scrofulous disease, the development of which was
-but slightly favored by the age of the patients, as a _tubercular_
-affection--that is, a disease which might be developed at every period
-of life. We think that tubercles were developed, in the phalanges,
-in the first case; and in the sternum, in the second; that these
-tubercles softened, and suppurated; and thus were formed the apparent
-scrofulous ulcers presented by these individuals. Probably, a similar
-circumstance occurs in the vertebræ, the bodies of which are destroyed;
-for distinguished observers, especially Delpech, have regarded Pott’s
-disease as a tubercular affection of the body of these bones. The cases
-of Dalandeterie would prove only that onanism favors the development of
-tubercles. Unfortunately, they are not the only cases, as we shall see,
-which establish this fact.
-
-Consumption, or phthisis tubercularis, is, in fact, one of the diseases
-caused most frequently by onanism. The act of venery--that power which
-has so much influence on the internal life of the tissues, and on the
-respiratory organs, and which, to use Rullier’s expression, seems
-to agitate the lungs--is commenced in most onanists exactly at that
-age when the chest enlarges in every direction, and which phthisis
-seems to prefer. “How many young persons,” says Portal, in his work
-on phthisis pulmonalis, “have been victims to their unhappy passion?
-Physicians find those every day, who remain imbecile, or who are so
-enervated, physically and morally, that they barely drag along a
-miserable existence: others die with marasmus; and many with phthisis
-pulmonalis.” In another work, the same author relates the case of a
-young person, seventeen years old, who was addicted to masturbation,
-and who fell a victim to this disease. This young person, who had
-became much deformed, was affected with raising of blood, and soon
-died of phthisis. “It results from numerous well ascertained facts,”
-say Fournier and Begin, “that those persons who indulge in onanism are
-generally remarkable for the imperfect development of their thorax, and
-for the promptitude with which the least exercise renders respiration
-difficult and hurried. Almost all these individuals contract chronic
-catarrhs, or more serious affections of the pulmonary organs; and
-finally perish, in a complete state of phthisis.” Broussais, also,
-places among the causes of phthisis pulmonalis, “erotic spasms, no
-matter in what manner they are excited.”
-
-We have seen this affection, more frequently than any other, resulting
-from onanism. Among other instances, we would mention that of a young
-man, who died in 1833. This young man sustained himself so well in
-public debate, that he was placed, at the expense of government, in a
-public school. He was then sixteen years old; and his health, which had
-previously been good, now failed. He became pale, languished, and grew
-thin; and this, too, although his appetite was keen, and his digestion
-excellent. Having my suspicions, and having communicated them to the
-patient, and also to other persons who could enlighten me, we were led
-to believe, from the answers made to me, that the too rapid growth of
-the body was the only cause of the state presented by the patient;
-and his state varied so little from that of health, that the young
-man assured me that he was very well. I therefore simply directed him
-to take more exercise, and to be more free in his diet. His loss of
-flesh, however, and paleness continuing, his parents felt anxious about
-him. I examined his organs separately: I could find none presenting
-any marks of disease, or which could explain the general state of the
-patient. My first suspicions then returned; but on questioning him, the
-same answers were given. The patient, who had already seen an instance
-of the bad effects of onanism, in the person of his younger brother,
-seemed deeply impressed with the danger of his habit. He, however,
-continued to lose strength. One day, after taking more violent exercise
-than usual, he fainted away. At the same time, a dry cough supervened,
-to which the patient at first did not attend. This was the first
-symptom indicating an affection of any particular organ. This cough
-soon became more frequent; and, by means of auscultation, we found that
-the respiration, at the summit of one of the lungs, was imperfect.
-At this time, the patient avowed to his father his deplorable habit.
-This had been contracted at school; it had been indulged in for two
-years; and of late, much more frequently than before. His danger was
-fully pointed out to him; parents, friends, physicians, all conjured
-him to abandon this secret vice. Treatises on onanism were placed in
-his hands; and every attempt was made to arouse in him the feeling
-of self-preservation. He was terrified; but the power of the habit
-was so great, that he did not leave it off till consumption had
-progressed very far. Deep abscesses successively formed in his lungs;
-the expectoration soon became purulent and excessive. Night sweats and
-diarrhœa followed; and the patient died in a terrible state of marasmus
-and exhaustion.
-
-In 1829, we prescribed for a young man, whose career was much more
-rapid. He had always enjoyed excellent health; and his parents
-exhibited no marks of consumption. Having married a very pretty widow,
-he indulged himself with her very freely at night, while during the
-day both were assiduously engaged. The female was seven or eight years
-older than her husband, and did not suffer much. He, however, soon
-became affected with cough, attended with bloody expectoration. When
-consulted, we informed the patient of his danger, unless he changed
-his mode of living. Our advice was not followed; and shortly after,
-hemorrhage from the lungs supervened so abundantly and obstinately,
-that notwithstanding the most active treatment, he died in eight days.
-
-The young man, too, mentioned by Tissot, was also doubtless affected
-with phthisis. “He came to Montpelier to pursue his studies; but was
-affected with phthisis, from excessive onanism: and I remember that his
-cough was so hard and constant, that all those who were near him were
-incommoded by it. He was frequently bled; doubtless, with a view to his
-relief. On consultation, he was ordered to go home, and take turtle
-soup; and two hours after, he died.”
-
-It is with phthisis, as with most of the other diseases, caused
-by masturbation. This habit causes disease, by cherishing and by
-cultivating special dispositions. Thus, the onanist born of consumptive
-parents, whose chest is narrow, with a long neck and thin limbs,
-and who presents symptoms of scrofula, is more liable to be affected
-with phthisis or consumption. This was the case with a young man, as
-mentioned by Rozier. This patient was evidently scrofulous, and many
-members of his family had been affected with the disease. He remained,
-however, pretty well until he was eighteen years old, when, in
-consequence of a contusion in one of his legs, he became affected with
-an ulcer, which was a long time healing. After it was cured, however,
-he remained in good health, and was lively, animated, and intelligent;
-but when twenty-five years old, he commenced indulging in onanism.
-He soon felt oppression at the chest, and cough; and although the
-affection of his chest increased, and he was aware of the dangers of
-onanism, he continued to indulge. Many physicians were consulted; but
-he did not mention his bad habit. The affection of the lungs continued;
-his sleep was interrupted; hectic fever supervened; his cheeks were
-tinged with an unnatural color; and his expectoration was grayish
-and purulent. The patient then decided on avowing his habit. Rozier
-attempted, in the most touching and persuasive manner, to induce him
-to abandon it; but in vain. Consumption continued to progress; and he
-was soon unable to talk, to move, or to make the least motion, without
-danger of suffocation. After remaining in this horrid state three
-years, the patient died.
-
-We have already remarked several times, that the respiration in
-onanists is frequently affected. Their breath is often short; they
-pant on the slightest exercise; are subject to stifling, &c. These
-symptoms, the existence of which cannot always be explained by that
-of any organic alteration in the heart or lungs, finally assume, in
-some individuals, the characters attributed to _nervous asthma_.
-The authors who have written on this subject, have all classed
-venereal excesses among its most frequent causes. “Individuals of a
-nervous temperament,” says M. Ferrus, “seem most particularly liable
-to it. But the influence of certain bad habits--as masturbation,
-the abuse of venereal pleasures by young persons, excesses of the
-table in old men, &c.--contribute, as powerfully as individual
-predispositions, to produce this disease.” Jolly remarks, in nearly
-similar language:--“Venereal excesses and masturbation,” says this
-distinguished physician, “have appeared in some cases to produce
-asthma. And if some authors think that too much importance is attached
-to this cause, they may readily appreciate its value by observing the
-effects of the venereal orgasm on the pulmonary circulation.” Daily
-observation proves that persons affected with asthma have generally
-used the goods of this life freely. To admit that venereal excesses
-often prepare for or excite an attack of asthma, we have only to regard
-an attack of asthma, whether excited or not by an organic lesion, as
-consisting in a spasm of the glottis; or, as Reisessen and Cruvelhier
-think, of the ramifications of the bronchi.
-
-Our remarks on asthma may apply to diseases of the heart and large
-vessels. The frequent repetitions of an act which render the emotions
-so powerful, frequent, and tumultuous, has often produced or increased
-aneurismatic dilatations of this organ; the thickening of its parietes,
-or other diseases, of the parenchyma, or of the vessels which leave
-it and go to it. Thus, the abuse of onanism, and of the pleasures of
-love, holds a high place on the list of causes of this affection.
-We have seen dilatations of the left ventricle of the heart, which
-evidently arose from this cause. “In some cases,” says Fournier and
-Begin, “palpitations, and even considerable lesions of the heart and
-large vessels, could have no other cause, in patients whose vigorous
-constitutions have long resisted the destructive practice of onanism,
-and who, notwithstanding their excesses, have attained an advanced
-age.” This last remark is particularly just. These diseases are by no
-means so immediately dangerous as is generally believed. The principal
-symptoms of diseases of the heart may exist, although this organ may
-not be materially altered. A remarkable instance of this may be seen
-in one of the cases already mentioned. The patient experienced for
-a long time difficulty of breathing; which increased on walking, and
-especially on going up stairs. These symptoms were so marked, that on
-entering the hospital, he exhibited all the symptoms of a hypertrophy
-of the left cavities of the heart. Four months after his entrance into
-the hospital, the patient died of the consequences of myelitis; and on
-opening the body, the heart was found perfectly healthy, of its normal
-size, and presented nothing unusual in the extent of its cavities, or
-in the thickness of their parietes.
-
-Among the diseases of the heart which may be caused by venereal
-excesses, there is one in particular mentioned by Blaud. He thinks
-that too frequent coition predisposes to _polypi of the heart_. He
-maintains, that the act produces its effects, either by weakening the
-motive powers of this organ, which they over-excite momentarily; or
-by causing too great an accumulation, and consequently a congestion
-of blood, in the cardiac cavities. This last fact seemed to him to
-be proved, by the oppression, the congestion in the head, and the
-palpitations, which attend coition.
-
-If venereal excesses may cause diseases of the heart, they may increase
-those which exist. They may also, by causing the rupture of an
-aneurism, produce instant death. But having already treated of these
-effects, we shall not return to the subject.
-
-Rachitis, and particularly alterations in the height, have been named
-by many authors among the ordinary effects of premature indulgences.
-We have already given, from Portal, the remarkable case of a young
-girl, who, indulging in excesses of onanism, became humpbacked, and
-then consumptive. In six months, the curve of the vertebral column
-progressed rapidly; the chest was depressed at the lower part of the
-sternum; there was a deep hollow in the epigastric region, while the
-abdomen was prominent. The same author has observed other similar
-cases. “I have seen,” says he, “four or five of these unfortunate
-creatures, from fifteen to eighteen years old, in whom the back was
-very convex, and the abdomen seemed pressed into the chest; the
-extremities of the long bones, particularly those which form the elbows
-and knees, were very much enlarged; the legs were thrown out, and
-their muscles were scarcely developed; their eyes were sunken; their
-countenances pale and white; and their voices acute. Any one, to judge
-of their ages by their looks, would think that they were not more than
-twelve years old. They were extremely weak, physically and morally,
-and became imbecile long before they died.” Dr. Richard, cited by
-Petit, has also seen considerable deformity of the ribs, resulting from
-onanism. Tissot placed this habit first among the causes of rachitis.
-M. Lonyer Villermey, also, regards onanism and involuntary pollutions
-as an active source of deviations in height. On the other hand, Dr.
-Laguerre, a gentleman who has attended to rachitic persons a good deal,
-tells us that the habit has been observed by him only once, as a cause
-of spinal deformity.
-
-It has also been advanced, that premature enjoyment may arrest the
-growth of the body, and consequently prevent it from attaining its
-normal height. We do not deny the possibility of such a result. We have
-seen many onanists, however, grow very rapidly, notwithstanding their
-excesses, and all the symptoms of extensive alteration. It follows,
-also, from the researches of Villermé and Quetelet, that the mean
-height of man is generally greater in the city than in the country; and
-yet, in the former, masturbation is more frequent. We can see, too, by
-comparing the increase in weight to that in length, during the first
-twenty years, that the development of the genital organs exercises
-much more influence on the mass of the body, than on its height: thus,
-between the ages of four and fifteen years--that is, during the period
-of puberty--the annual increase of weight is quadruple of what it was
-in preceding years. Do not these reasons authorize us to think, that if
-premature excesses have any influence on the height of man, this action
-is less than is generally imagined?
-
-Besides rachitis, caries, and tubercles, which have been mentioned,
-are the bones ever affected with any other disease, in consequence
-of venereal indulgences? The only case in point is that already
-mentioned,(p. 85) as reported by Serrurier, of a man who was reduced
-to a complete state of marasmus, in consequence of venereal excesses
-and nocturnal pollutions. In this man’s case, a remarkable circumstance
-occurred. Having attempted, a few days before death, to rest himself
-from the fatigues of the bed, by spending a few hours in the easy
-chair, he fractured the bone of his right thigh at its centre, merely
-by attempting to cross the right thigh on the left. Might not this
-disease, which is very rare, and is termed friability of the bones, be
-also caused by the excesses we have mentioned?
-
-These excesses, if accompanied by those of the table, or if indulged
-in under unfavorable circumstances, may be followed by acute, as
-well as by chronic affections, and particularly by fevers of a bad
-character. This result of excessive enjoyments is frequent; and cases
-of it have been seen by almost every physician. It was known to the
-ancients. Hippocrates gives the history of a young man of Melibœa, who,
-after indulging in women and wine, was attacked with all the symptoms
-of typhus fever. Bartholin knew a person, recently married, who was
-attacked, after conjugal excesses, with an acute fever, attended with
-great depression, sinking, nausea, immoderate thirst, &c. This patient
-was cured by rest and tonics. Hoffmann, who states this case, also
-mentions that of a man, who never indulged in venereal excesses without
-being attacked with fever, which continued several days. Tissot, in
-1761 and 1762, knew two very healthy, strong, and vigorous young men,
-who were attacked, one the day after, and the other the second night
-of their marriage, with a very violent fever, preceded by no chill,
-pulse quick and hard, wakefulness, many slight convulsive motions, very
-great inquietude, and dry skin. The appearance of the second was very
-much altered, and he was troubled with dysuria. He first thought that
-an intemperate use of wine was in part the procuring part of these
-symptoms; but I was of a different opinion in regard to the second.
-They were cured at the end of two days. This circumstance added to the
-character of the disease, leaves no doubt of the cause.
-
-Sauvages admits, after Dellon, that a typhus of exhausted persons
-exists. The Portuguese term patients affected with this malady,
-_esfalfados_. The exhaustion caused by immoderate indulgence in
-venereal pleasures, says this author, is very common among the
-Indians. It is a continued fever, in which the pulse is sometimes full
-and strong, sometimes weak, and almost imperceptible. The urine is
-sometimes very red, but transparent; the skin is hot and dry; and there
-is watchfulness, nausea, and violent thirst.
-
-Farther: All authors who have written on the diseases of warm climates,
-have mentioned the too frequent repetition of the act of venery among
-the causes of these typhus affections, which have been termed _febris
-ardens_, _causus_, _yellow fever_, &c. In temperate climates, adynamic
-ataxic fevers, &c., and very severe acute diseases, have often been
-known to occur from excesses in venery, or from masturbation.
-
-If _satyriasis_ and _nymphomania_ have been regarded as rare diseases,
-it is only because the meaning of these terms has been too confined
-to embrace numerous cases which, however, have the greatest analogy
-with those diseases to which these terms are applied. Generally, these
-persons are considered as affected with satyriasis and nymphomania,
-who are irresistibly impelled to coition, and resort, to satisfy
-their desires, to the most indecent actions, and to the most direct
-provocations. Thus defined, these diseases are rare; and most
-practitioners have never seen them. But if satyriasis and nymphomania
-be regarded as an unusual state of heat, by which one is led to desire
-and to practise not only coition, but the act of venery in any mode,
-then the scene enlarges, and these affections deserve to be placed
-among those which are observed most frequently.
-
-We shall adopt the latter sense. In our view, male and female onanists
-are affected with satyriasis and nymphomania, as much as those to whom
-these terms are generally applied. In both, the sense of venery,
-existing to an unusual extent, affects the mind, and incites to
-dangerous actions, repugnant both to modesty and reason. Onanists do
-not, like other persons affected with satyriasis, expose their persons,
-and solicit with voice and gesture those of the other sex: their
-deranged and delirious imaginations pursue another course. What need
-have they of the other sex? Their inclinations lead them to solitary
-indulgence. Their thoughts and actions, however, are not less vile than
-those of others affected with satyriasis; but they are indulged in
-secret. Hence, between the satyriasis of books and that of onanists,
-there is only a difference of form: the foundation is the same. Admit,
-however, that it be desirable to distinguish this satyriasis from the
-former, and to give it a special name; is it not better to consider
-them only as two varieties of the same affection, one of which impels
-to onanism, the other to coition?
-
-The degree of onanistic satyriasis and of nymphomania depends on the
-power the venereal sense has over the will. These affections do not
-exist in those with whom it is optional whether they shall indulge in
-onanism or not, nor in those who can refrain from coition. Thus, then,
-a person may masturbate, without being affected with satyriasis. This
-is the case, when the sentiment of self-preservation is sufficiently
-strong to resist desires, when the persons yield readily to reprimands
-and punishments. Satyriasis may be considered as existing to some
-extent in the onanist, if he cannot refrain. This was the case with a
-young man, whose history is given by Begin and Fournier. From early
-puberty, he was addicted to masturbation; and when eighteen years
-old, he presented some of the bad effects of this habit. This young
-man was endowed with a brilliant mind: but, although well educated,
-and although he well knew the dangers of his habit, yet he could not
-refrain. His good resolutions were formed only to be broken. He died.
-
-In a young woman whom we attended, the struggle with her passions
-terminated more favorably. It was not the desire of preserving her
-life, which induced her to leave off her bad habits; but the wish of
-conforming to the will of her father. Her constitution was already
-considerably affected, when the cause of it was discovered. The father
-of this young girl told her how much pain and shame her bad habit
-caused him, and requested her to abstain from it. She was extremely
-mild and docile, and made every effort to please and obey him. It was
-in vain: but whenever she was inclined to masturbate, the fault was
-confessed as soon as committed. Coercive measures were finally resolved
-upon. The patient not only consented to have her hands tied every
-night, but requested it, and even stated the manner in which she might
-be most effectually prevented from abusing herself. The venereal sense
-gradually became subdued, and confined within the proper limits. And
-thus, this habit--or, rather, the nymphomania, which was the result,
-and also the cause of it--was cured.
-
-Satyriasis and nymphomania, arising from onanism, are most intense,
-when the persons affected with it can no longer conceal their feelings,
-but indulge openly in vile manœuvres. We have already mentioned some
-remarkable instances of this state. The following may serve as the type
-of the greatest degree of nymphomania. The patient was a little girl
-less than three years old, who indulged freely in onanism. Neither
-caresses, entreaties, threats, nor punishments, could correct her.
-The child grew, however. But at the sight of any pleasant object, she
-abandoned herself to her manœuvres. At the period of the crisis, she
-seemed almost entirely to have lost her sight and hearing. Threats
-and punishments finally restrained her, while in the presence of her
-parents; but when alone, she still continued her bad habits. This
-state resisted all remedies. When married, the legitimate sources of
-enjoyment took the place of the passionate indulgences to which she had
-been accustomed from infancy. She finally became pregnant, and died in
-labor. (_Dict. des Sc. Med._; vol. xxxvi., p. 566.)
-
-Onanism is not only a direct cause of satyriasis and of nymphomania;
-it may leave in the genital organs a certain disposition, which, if
-cherished, may degenerate into one of these affections. The following
-case, published by Duprest-Rony, seems to us to be an instance of
-this:--
-
-A young man, twenty years old, of a strong and almost athletic frame,
-but who had been enfeebled by onanism, abandoned himself, from the age
-of fifteen to eighteen years, to this destructive habit. He indulged
-in this habit even while in the bath, and sometimes to the extent of
-fifteen times in a day. His constitution was enfeebled; his mind was
-affected; his memory impaired. In accordance with the advice of some
-prudent people, this young man renounced this fatal habit. During the
-next two years, he was perfectly continent. His constitution resumed
-its vigor; his memory and other mental faculties were restored. His
-parents now placed him with a merchant. He entered upon his new
-occupations with zeal and activity; but receiving marks of attachment
-from the merchant and his wife daily, he imagined that she was in love
-with him. On his side, the passion was returned. Actuated by the fear
-of violating the duties of gratitude, and the desire of possessing this
-lady, who was neither young nor pretty, his situation daily became
-more embarrassing. Whenever she looked at him, erections took place,
-and there was a discharge of semen. During the night, he had frequent
-pollutions. His faculties now became deranged: this derangement
-supervened after reading the Phedra of Racine. He identified himself so
-closely with the characters of this piece, that he supposed himself to
-be Hippolyte, and considered his mistress to be Phedra, and her husband
-as Theseus. More amorous than Hippolyte, and no less virtuous, he threw
-himself one day at the feet of Theseus, and said, “Theseus! the crime
-is not yet consummated--your wife is not yet guilty. I have hitherto
-resisted her prayers--her tears: but I am no longer master of myself;
-and if she is not removed from my presence, I must yield.” Great was
-the astonishment of the supposed Theseus. He resolved to send the
-young man away. This cured the delirium: but the erections and seminal
-emissions continued. The stomach and intestinal tube became inert. The
-patient’s appetite was good; but as soon as he ate food, pains occurred
-in the epigastric region, and uneasiness in the rest of the body. The
-disease finally yielded to the combined use of antispasmodics and
-tonics. And now, this young man, who has been married for five or six
-years, enjoys fine health. (_Diss. sur le Satyriasis._ Paris, an xii.)
-
-Instead of the disposition just mentioned, masturbation may leave in
-the genital organs an irritability of a different kind, the results of
-which are not less disagreeable. A case of this presented itself in a
-young female, whom we attended. While at board, she indulged freely in
-onanism. She was married when seventeen years old; and then expected
-legally to enjoy what had seemed to her the extreme of pleasure. She
-was disappointed, however: marriage was only the source of uneasiness
-and pain. She was perfectly insensible to the caresses of her
-husband--or, rather, in submitting to them, she experienced the most
-disagreeable sensations. A painful state of spasms and convulsions then
-affected her, which continued several hours after the cause had ceased
-to act. We were called to her several times at night, to relieve this
-state, which caused great anxiety. This lady’s susceptibility, also,
-was very great; and she constantly complained of some of the attendants
-of hysteria. She presented every appearance of a lymphatic temperament.
-During her youth, too, she had been affected with symptoms of scrofula,
-from which even now she is not entirely free, although twenty-two years
-old. Do not these circumstances, not generally coexistent with extreme
-sensibility, prove, that the extreme irritability of the uterine system
-is to be ascribed to her self-abuse?
-
-Priapism, which signifies permanent erection of the penis, without
-pleasure, and even in some cases with pain, sometimes follows
-indiscretions. This has been seen particularly in young children, whose
-genital organs have been excited: sometimes, too, it occurs in old
-men. Cœlius Aurelian, (lib. iii., ch. 18,) relates, that an old man was
-affected with priapism for several months. The erection was firm, like
-a horn, but not very painful. Finally, it yielded.
-
-The genital organs may, from too much excitement, lose their
-sensibility, and waste. The manipulations, which at first were followed
-with the desired result, become unable to excite the genital sense.
-They may sometimes cause the erection of the penis, and even excite a
-painful or inconvenient priapism; but they cannot renew the fountain of
-enjoyment. The remembrance of past pleasures remains; and the onanist,
-disturbed by their recollection, torments his blunted organs. Obtaining
-no satisfaction from the modes formerly employed, he now resorts to
-others, which are sometimes dreadful. His hand which is now armed with
-some instrument, no longer confines itself to the surface: the surface
-no longer feels. He now ventures inside, and shrinks from nothing. This
-continues until these dangerous resources fail, which happens, because
-they also lose their effect, or because of the severe accidents with
-which they are sometimes attended.
-
-The following case from Chopart, on diseases of the urinary passages,
-shows the almost incredible extent of insensibility which the penis may
-attain, or of delirium which may affect a man, who, having exhausted
-his faculties by excesses, still remains a slave to his passions:--
-
-“A shepherd of Languedoc, Gabriel Gallien, about the age of fifteen,
-became addicted to onanism, and to such a degree, as to practise it
-seven or eight times in a day. Emission became at last so difficult,
-that he would strive for an hour, and then discharge only a few drops
-of blood. At the age of six and twenty, his hand became insufficient:
-all he could do, was to keep the penis in a continual state of
-priapism. He then bethought himself of tickling the internal part of
-his urethra, by means of a bit of wood, six inches long; and he would
-spend in that occupation several hours, while tending his flocks in
-the solitude of the mountains. By a continuation of this titillation
-for sixteen years, the canal of the urethra became hard, callous, and
-insensible. The piece of wood then became as ineffectual as his hand.
-At last, after much fruitless effort, G., one day in despair, drew
-from his pocket a blunt knife, and made an incision into his glands,
-along the course of the urethra. This operation, which would have
-been painful to any body else, was, in him, attended with a sensation
-of pleasure, followed by a copious emission. He had recourse to his
-new discovery every time his desire returned. When, after an incision
-into the cavernous bodies, the blood flowed profusely, he stopped the
-hemorrhage, by applying around the penis a pretty tight ligature. At
-last, after repeating the same process, perhaps a thousand times, he
-ended in splitting his penis into two equal parts, from the orifice of
-the penis to the stratum, very near to the symphisis pubis. When he
-had got so far, unable to carry his incision any farther, and again
-reduced to new privations, he had recourse to a piece of wood, shorter
-than the former: he introduced it into what remained of the urethra,
-and exciting at pleasure the extremities of the ejaculatory ducts, he
-provoked easily the discharge of semen. He continued this about ten
-years. After that long space of time, he one day introduced his bit
-of wood so carelessly, that it slipped from his fingers, and dropped
-into the bladder. Excruciating pain and serious symptoms came on.
-The patient was conveyed to the hospital at Narbonne. The surgeon,
-surprised at the sight of two penes of ordinary size, both capable
-of erection, and in that stage diverging on both sides; and seeing,
-besides, from the scars, and from the callous edges of the divisions,
-that this conformation was not congenital from his birth; obliged
-the patient to give him an account of his life, which he did, with
-the details which have been related. This wretch was cut, as for the
-stone--recovered of the operation--but died three months after, of an
-abscess in the right side of the chest; his phthisical state having
-been evidently brought on by the practice of onanism, carried on
-nearly forty years.”
-
-Whatever may be the degree of degradation attending onanism, we do not
-think it possible to adduce a second instance of such a mutilation.
-Gallien’s unhappy idea of introducing a foreign body into the
-urethra, has often occurred to others, who had availed themselves,
-but unsuccessfully, of the ordinary resources of masturbation. These
-unfortunate people have always been obliged to call in medical advice,
-either on account of the diseases caused by their dangerous manœuvres,
-or--much more frequently--by the symptoms to which they fall victims,
-through their carelessness. In fact, the implements used often escape
-into the bladder; and then the acute suffering and fear of death oblige
-them to reveal what they had formerly concealed, and to undergo an
-operation which is always painful, and which is not exempt from danger.
-
-We will give a few instances of this kind of accident. An innkeeper,
-near Saumur, was in the habit, like Gallien, of titillating the
-urethra, by introducing foreign bodies. He used an iron wire, seven
-or eight inches long, the end of which was crooked like a hook, to
-obtain, probably, more exquisite pleasure. One day, while indulging in
-this singular manœuvre, he suddenly felt severe pain. The membraneous
-portion of the canal was ruptured. The unfortunate man made several
-attempts to withdraw the wire; but the hook, which had entered the soft
-parts, rendered it impossible. Overcome by suffering and shame, he
-wished to get rid of it; and with this view, he rounded the loose part
-of the wire into the form of a ring, proposing in this manner to pull
-upon it more firmly. He exercised this force till the ring was nearly
-broken, but the iron was still in its place. He now expected death; but
-the suffering was so great, that he was obliged to call a physician;
-and Dr. Fardeau, of Saumur, visited him.
-
-The penis, and also the skin of the scrotum, was enormously tumefied:
-all the tissues which are inserted in the penis were also swelled,
-hot, and painful. The belly began to be puffy, and the urine was
-suppressed; the face was red, and the eye filmy; the mind began to be
-affected; the pulse was hard, frequent, and corded. Dr. Fardeau grasped
-the loose portion of the wire, pulled upon it slightly, and immediately
-found that the other end was arrested by an immoveable obstacle. He
-then examined the parts attentively; and found, to his astonishment,
-that the hook was fixed in the inner edge of the ischiatic tuberosity.
-An oblong incision was now made over this part, the hook seized, and
-the wire was withdrawn through the perineum. The patient was relieved,
-and finally was completely restored. (_Lancette Fr._, October 13th,
-1831.)
-
-Saraillé has reported a similar case. The patient was fifty years old,
-and called this surgeon the 18th of October, 1813. He stated that a
-sailing needle, about four inches long, had unfortunately slipped into
-the urethra; and the point had become fixed upward, near the root of
-the penis. After suffering for eight days, during which the presence of
-this body excited frequent erections, Lallemand operated, and extracted
-it.
-
-Many individuals have been similarly affected. They have all imagined
-that they could extract the instrument they used, when some unforeseen
-accident has deprived them of it. A young man, nineteen years old,
-whose case is mentioned by Louis Senn, made use of the stalk of a
-plant, which he introduced into the urethra. It broke; and after much
-suffering, the operation for stone was employed to extract it, and the
-calculi which had formed around it. A similar circumstance happened
-to a man, thirty-eight years old, a patient of Rigal’s. This man
-introduced into his urethra the stalk of a sword lily, (_gladiolus
-communis_.) This stalk broke, fell into the bladder, and after two
-months of pain and danger, the operation for stone was employed to
-extract it. It was two inches long; and was already covered with a
-saline concretion, one or two lines thick. Bonnet, formerly surgeon at
-Hotel Dieu, at Clermont, stated in his lectures, that a vine-dresser
-used a vine-stalk for this purpose. During an emission of semen, he
-dropped the stalk, which entered the urethra, and passed into the
-bladder, where it caused symptoms which required the operation of
-lithotomy. The foreign body extracted was three inches long, and three
-lines thick. Would it be believed, that Civiale has extracted from the
-bladder of a man, by means of lithotrity, a bean, which was introduced
-eleven months before, and which gave rise to all the symptoms of stone?
-A volume might be filled with facts of a similar character. Many may be
-found in the Ephemerides Curiosorum, Memoirs of the Royal Academy of
-Sciences, those of the Royal Society of Medicine, and of the Academy of
-Surgery; in the works of Chopart, Deschamps, Lamotte, Tolet, Morgagni,
-Van Swieten, Morand, Pouteau, &c.
-
-The dangers of these practices are not simply those which are stated in
-the facts already mentioned; nor are they confined to exhausting the
-rest of the sensibility preserved in the genital organs: they finally
-cause chronic diseases of the urethra and bladder. These organs, when
-constantly irritated by applications which in individuals not entirely
-exhausted are always painful--these organs inflame; indurations,
-ulcerations, and strictures, form in the urethra; after which supervene
-all the symptoms of acute and chronic blenorrhea, detentions of urine,
-and catarrh of the bladder.
-
-Venereal delirium has led other individuals to use processes no less
-ridiculous, and equally as dangerous. The penis of those who are thus
-unfortunate has remained in the places where it has been introduced,
-with a view to imitate the natural process better. Sabatier has related
-the case of a young man, who had passed his penis through the handle
-of a key. The handle had been pushed far towards the pubis, and the
-penis had swelled so as to conceal it from sight: the swelling was also
-increased by the efforts of the patient to withdraw it. After oiling
-the parts well, the handle was slipped down as far as the glans; but
-here scarifications were required, to diminish the engorgement, before
-the penis could be liberated. After this, escars sloughed off, which
-were followed by cicatrices, which rendered the part deformed, although
-a sound was introduced into the urethra, to prevent this result.
-
-The same author relates that a young man had passed his penis into a
-copper ring: this, however, was fortunately divided with a pair of
-strong scissors. Another used a rough iron ring for this purpose. The
-penis puffed out, above and below this ring. A locksmith was called in,
-to file it off, which could only be done by placing small bits of wood
-between the penis and the iron ring. Much time was required to remove
-it. In the same manner--that is, by filing--a ring was removed from
-another patient, where gangrene had threatened to appear.
-
-One of the most horrid cases of this kind on record, is that of a young
-man, who, on taking a bath, indulged in masturbation, by placing his
-penis into the hole in the bottom of the tub, made for the removal of
-the water. The glans soon became so much swelled, that he could not
-withdraw it. His cries brought him assistance; but it was not easy to
-remove him from the fetters he had forged for himself. (_Dict. des Sc.
-Med._, vol. xxi., p. 167.)
-
-Many similar cases have occurred in Dupuytren’s practice. One was that
-of a young man who came to the clinical lecture at Hotel Dieu, having
-the socket of a candlestick, in front of which the glans was enormously
-tumefied. Being unable, by any effort, to remove it, the cylindrical
-portion surrounding the penis was filed, and thus taken from him. It
-would occupy too much room, to enumerate all the facts of this kind
-which have been noted by practitioners; but a common accident, and
-which has been seen several times by Dupuytren, is the ligature of
-the penis by a thread or wire. Some young men, and even adults, have
-bound the penis in fits of erotic delirium, so that the knot could not
-be loosed; and a circular section has been made in the skin, and the
-urethra even has been opened and cut. It is evident, that, in these
-cases, the only thing to be done is to divide the thread, to dress the
-wound, and then to introduce a gum-elastic sound, in order to prevent
-the formation of an urinary fistula, or of an accidental hypospadias.
-
-Another kind of strangulation--which is much less serious, however,
-than those we have mentioned--may result from masturbation and coition,
-in those individuals where the opening of the prepuce is too narrow.
-This prolongation of the skin, after being drawn violently back behind
-the corona glandis, strangles the penis, as would be done by a foreign
-body, and cannot be brought again to its primitive situation: there is
-then a paraphimosis. All authors who have treated of this affection,
-have placed among the causes of it that which we have mentioned. We
-have seen several instances of this character. I will cite that of a
-young boy, seven or eight years old, in whom this accident was produced
-during masturbation. The glans was tumefied, and the prepuce formed a
-large fold around it. The frightened parents sent for our assistance.
-Methodical and long continued pressure soon brought things to their
-proper state.
-
-_Herpes praeputialis_, another affection of the prepuce, may arise from
-the constant excitement of this part. Fortunately, this eruption is a
-slight disease, and generally terminates in a week or two, even without
-medical treatment.
-
-Persons who indulge in lascivious ideas, are often affected with a
-discharge from the end of the penis--and this though there has been no
-masturbation--of a viscid, whitish mucus, which leaves on the linen
-spots similar to those produced by the white of an egg. The edges of
-the meatus urinarius may also be glued together, by the drying of this
-mucus. This discharge, which has been described by John Hunter, is
-not a disease, although it has all the appearance of it; and it keeps
-some people in constant fear, lest they have contracted gonorrhœa. It,
-however, results from an unusual excitement of the mucous membrane,
-lining the glans and urethra. Now, if the simple excitement of the
-venereal sense can cause such an effect, what might not be expected
-from excesses in coition or masturbation? Thus, these causes are
-mentioned, whenever the causes of balanitis and blenorrhagia are
-alluded to. All authors agree on this subject; and if but few cases are
-brought forward in support of this opinion, it is because the subject
-has not been disputed. The following is found in a dissertation of
-Closs. The patient was a young man addicted to masturbation, who had
-been affected for more than six months with a gonorrhœal discharge,
-which had been neglected because it occasioned no suffering. The
-matter of the discharge, however, becoming acrid, green, and yellow,
-he was obliged to ask medical advice. He protested, under oath, that
-he had never been exposed to contract disease; and Closs, therefore,
-considered this blenorrhea as the result of masturbation, in which the
-patient had indulged even before puberty.
-
-This symptom is seen still more frequently after excesses in coition,
-especially if attended with excesses in drinking, as Lallemand has
-remarked, or if one has cohabited with a female whose genital organs
-were very small. It has often been observed in the newly married, and
-has sometimes occasioned unmerited suspicions and reproaches. It is
-said, too, that excesses indulged in by persons whose genital organs
-are perfectly sound, may produce in one or both of them a more or less
-intense blenorrhea. Cullerier and Ratier say, that they have verified
-this fact several times. Can such a blenorrhea be communicated? Cassan,
-in the Bulletin Universel of Ferussac, has inserted a note, in which he
-states that many of the facts observed in man and animals, particularly
-of the genus Bos, prove, that blenorrhea, which is simply the result
-of venereal excesses between healthy individuals, easily assumes a
-contagious character, and is attended with symptoms analogous to those
-of syphilis, and requires the same treatment.
-
-Inflammation of the urethra may become very intense, and extend
-to the bladder, particularly when venereal excesses coexist with
-intemperate habits: the discharge of urine may then be interrupted, and
-consequently all the symptoms of dysuria and strangury may supervene.
-Chronic catarrh of the bladder is often observed, also, in those
-individuals who have abused the pleasures of love.
-
-Montegre, speaking of a kind of cystitis, which he terms _vesical
-hemorrhoids_, mentions among its causes venereal excesses, and
-particularly those repeated titillations, which keep the genital organs
-in a state of semi-orgasm, which is not terminated by any crisis.
-
-Lallemand reports the case of an individual, who, being addicted to
-venereal excesses, experienced frequent desire to urinate, and found
-it difficult to empty his bladder. Finally, unable to pass water
-without the use of a sound, he learned to introduce it himself. This
-was not difficult, although the bladder could not be emptied without
-it. The urine was turbid, thick, and deposited a great deal of glairy
-mucus, which adhered to the pot de chambre. The prostatic portion of
-the urethra was cauterized, but without success. Lallemand thought
-that there was a morbid development of the middle lobe of the prostate
-gland. In another patient, whose history is given by this excellent
-observer, excessive masturbation appeared to have predisposed to a
-chronic inflammation of the genito-urinary organs, which were developed
-under the influence of the abuse of coition. (_Obs._, &c., p. 440.)
-
-It is easily seen, that if coition and masturbation may cause all
-these inflammations, so, too, they may sustain and increase them.
-The pleasures of love, therefore, should be strictly forbidden to
-persons affected with diseases of the genito-urinary passages. Acute
-inflammation of the urethra, blenorrhagia, has often been known
-to pass to a chronic state by a single act of venery; which, says
-Lewedrain, may even cause this change several months after the apparent
-termination of acute blenorrhagia.
-
-May an incontinence of urine be produced by excesses in coition or
-masturbation? We have more than once seen this disease in young
-onanists. Sainte Marie, also, places it among the symptoms of
-daily involuntary pollution; and Lallemand has remarked, that most
-individuals affected with this pollution had been subject, in their
-infancy, to incontinence of urine. May not the relations between these
-two affections extend to the causes which determine them?
-
-One of the most common causes of excesses in venery is, the
-_involuntary loss of semen_. This disease, which has been termed
-_spermatorrhœa_, _involuntary pollution_, may also arise from other
-causes; but as it results most frequently from excesses in masturbation
-or coition, we shall devote particular attention to it.
-
-Let us consider the mode in which the excretion of semen takes place in
-the normal state. It is the remote consequence of a voluntary action,
-and the immediate result of involuntary contractions. The venereal
-sense is excited voluntarily, either by copulation, or by applying the
-hand: this excitement is carried to as great an extent as possible; and
-then a crisis, entirely independent of the will, terminates it. This
-crisis occurs sooner or later. It may even be quickened or retarded by
-the will, which may excite or modify the venereal sense; but when it
-does take place, it is always by involuntary contractions--that is, by
-a true convulsion.
-
-This last action has two well marked periods. In the first, the semen
-passes from the seminal vesicles into the urethra; in the second,
-this liquid is violently expelled. The contraction of the seminal
-vesicles--and perhaps, also, that of the levatores ani muscles--are
-the powers by which the semen comes into the urethra. The ejaculation
-is caused by the muscles of the perinœum, and particularly by the
-bulbo-cavernosus muscle. The swelling and hardness of the corpus
-cavernosum furnish this muscle with a point of resistance, which
-enables it to compress more efficiently the semen with which the
-urethra is filled; and the straightening of this canal, by the
-erection, renders the expulsion of this fluid more easy. All these
-motions take place by jerks; and, we repeat it, convulsively, without
-the aid of the will.
-
-The involuntary excretion of the semen, the morbid pollution, may take
-place sometimes in the manner described, sometimes in another mode.
-In the first case, it differs from what occurs in the normal state,
-only not being preceded by those acts which are performed voluntarily
-by man. Secondly, the semen is excreted without any convulsive effort;
-it flows like the tears, the saliva, the bile. The semen comes into
-the urethra, and escapes from it merely because it is there. There
-is no ejaculation: and this is easily conceived of; for the genital
-organs are not sufficiently excited, to cause the ejaculatory powers to
-be convulsed, as is proved by the excessive weakness of the venereal
-sensation. And, secondly, one of the indispensable conditions of
-the ejaculation--erection of the penis--does not exist. There are,
-then, two kinds of involuntary pollutions; one which is _convulsive_,
-and the other which is _not so_. Between these two kinds, there are
-intermediate degrees, in which spermatorrhœa partakes more or less of
-one or the other. These degrees often mark the passage from convulsive
-spermatorrhœa to that which is not convulsive; for the latter has
-generally been preceded by the former. We shall see hereafter, that the
-existence of one of these affections does not forbid that of the other;
-and that the ejaculation of semen is possible in some individuals who
-present habitually an insensible flow of this fluid.
-
-Involuntary pollutions have been distinguished until now in another
-manner: they have been divided into _diurnal_ and _nocturnal_.
-These distinctions are founded only on accessory circumstances.
-What difference does it make, whether the pollutions occur by night
-or by day, provided they are similar in other respects? If, on the
-contrary, there are more essential differences, why not give to them
-the importance they demand? Farther: is not convulsive spermatorrhœa,
-like that which is not convulsive, seen both at night and day? These
-are the reasons why we have sought to distinguish these affections more
-logically, and which have led us to propose the new distinction just
-mentioned.
-
-Convulsive spermatorrhœa may occur in all individuals, and under the
-influence of a great many causes, without being necessarily a disease.
-After excessive continence, it may even prove a salutary crisis. This
-pollution has a pathological character, when it is repeated too often,
-or under unfavorable circumstances; and then it produces the same
-result as excesses in coition or masturbation, and generally occurs
-only in individuals already enfeebled by this kind of excess. Sleep
-is the most favorable state for an attack of spermatorrhœa; and from
-this circumstance it is called nocturnal pollution. The temperature of
-the bed, and lying on the back--circumstances which favor the warmth
-and excitement of the lower part of the spinal marrow--may also cause
-the convulsive excretion of the semen. But another cause of it is,
-that during the sleep of the external senses, the internal senses have
-control, and have more power, because the action of the others is
-completely suspended. Cabanis remarks this fact, in saying that the
-genital organs do not participate in the repose of the external senses,
-but seem to be more excitable when these are asleep. We consider, that
-what takes place then is analogous to what is observed in idiots,
-who, deaf, blind, and dead to all the feelings of relation, abandon
-themselves to every excess, to satisfy a sense, the excitement of which
-in them often amounts to constant satyriasis.
-
-If the sleep be very profound, pollution may take place without the
-consciousness of the patient, or, at any rate, without his remembrance
-of it. When he wakes, the loss of semen is then discovered only by its
-stain, and the state of fatigue, weakness, and malaise attending it. A
-lascivious dream, however, generally attends a pollution. These dreams
-are not, as is generally thought, the cause of the pollution: if they
-exist, it is because the venereal sense, which is excited, speaks for
-itself, even as hunger, thirst, or any internal sensation may do. These
-dreams have a peculiar character, which has been pointed out by many
-writers. The individual is rarely placed in voluptuous circumstances,
-where his imagination places him during his waking hours; but he is
-surrounded by females who are hideous and repelling, and whom he is as
-it were compelled to enjoy.
-
-In fact, these pollutions fatigue more than those which are excited
-voluntarily. On rising, the patient experiences a general and more
-or less distinct feeling of feebleness and of suffering. His loins
-and limbs seem as if he had taken a long walk, or as if they had been
-bruised; the countenance is pale; the eyelids are swelled and bluish;
-the patient is sad and stupid. Finally, he presents physically and
-morally the consequences of an abuse of venery. It may readily be
-imagined, that the periods of spermatorrhœa render the exhaustion more
-rapid than the voluntary excesses already commenced. If, contrary to
-custom, the onanist remains one night without pollution, the organs
-which he permits to rest supply the unaccustomed activity. Happy is
-he, when these symptoms do not seem to him an evidence that this flow
-of semen is necessary. Every thing which specially excites the genital
-organs, as lascivious thoughts, voluptuous sights, riding, a soft and
-warm bed, &c., and also every thing which produces a more general
-excitement, in which these organs participate, as wine, liquors,
-coffee, spices, &c.; are so many causes which combine with the direct
-provocations of the patient, to multiply the causes by which he is
-excited.
-
-The nocturnal pollutions, however, are not formidable to those onanists
-who are reformed. Inspired by the sentiment of self-preservation,
-warned by the sufferings, counsels, and by reading, they have resolved
-to abandon for ever the manœuvres which they know to be dangerous.
-This resolution they will be able to keep: they, however, anxiously
-demand if they are not too late. The genital organs rebel against the
-decision. How melancholy must be the state of the patient! He sees, in
-perspective, sufferings, even a death, which seems to be inevitable.
-To avoid it, he had made a sacrifice; he has abandoned those tastes
-which exercised such absolute control over him: but his organs, which
-have been irritated, continue the work which he wished to interrupt.
-He is irritated--he despairs. Let him be of good cheer; when the will
-perseveres, it generally triumphs. I attended an onanist, who was
-suddenly converted by reading the work of Tissot, and who experienced
-all the troubles to which we have alluded. He was constantly tormented
-by the remembrance of the past night, and the fear of that which was
-to come. He slept on a coarse bed; and always enveloped the privy
-parts with linen, wet with vinegar and water, before going to sleep;
-promising himself to awake, as soon as he was assailed by dreams.
-By his will, however, he finally succeeded; and he had the power of
-watching himself during sleep. His pollutions gradually became less
-frequent, and finally disappeared entirely. This is generally the case
-where all bad habits cease.
-
-Convulsive spermatorrhœa is not very common, while a person is awake:
-it then rarely presents the purely convulsive character, with perfect
-erection, and distinct ejaculation, that is seen in a healthy emission
-of semen. This state, however, is possible: an instance of it may be
-seen in the case of satyriasis stated by M. Duprest-Rony. Whenever this
-young man beheld his mistress looking at him, erection took place, and
-ejaculation followed. He, however, had refrained from masturbating for
-two years, and had regained in a great measure his former strength. M.
-Sainte Marie has reported a case of priapism, during which the patient
-ejaculated fourteen times in a few hours. But this affection was not in
-consequence of venereal excesses, and the emission of semen presented
-nothing more extraordinary than other cases of priapism. Diurnal
-convulsive pollution is seldom accompanied, in individuals exhausted
-by abuses of masturbation and coition, with a perfect erection. The
-size of the penis increases, but it does not become hard. The semen is
-then emitted only to a short distance, if there be any ejaculation. The
-least cause, the slightest touch, is sufficient to excite this. Thus,
-in a man thirty years old, whom Tissot has mentioned, after Boerhaave,
-the semen escaped whenever there was a commencement of an erection,
-for it was never complete; and instead of being expelled forcibly,
-it oozed out drop by drop. The patient became impotent. This symptom
-(adds Tissot) is very frequent among those who are exhausted, and it
-contributes to continue the exhaustion. The slightest excitement causes
-the commencement of an erection, which is followed by an emission.
-We have seen a similar phenomenon in one of the patients of M.
-Dalandeterie. There were frequent painful erections, of short duration,
-which always terminated by a more or less abundant discharge of fluid.
-These kinds of pollutions were always painful, and were followed by
-extreme prostration. It is evident, from the remarks we have quoted,
-that there was no ejaculation in this patient; and probably, also,
-the erections, though painful, were imperfect. Daily convulsive
-spermatorrhœa assumes then, as it were, a bastard character in
-onanists: it occupies an intermediate place between proper convulsive
-spermatorrhœa, such as occurs during sleep, and the non-convulsive
-spermatorrhœa, which we shall mention directly.
-
-There is a phenomenon very similar to this bastard spermatorrhœa, and
-which shows itself when the patient is inclined to indulge in coition
-or masturbation: the emission of semen takes place on the commencement
-of the act of venery. It is a quasi involuntary pollution. In this
-case, which is by no means rare, the erection is not complete, simply
-because there is not time for it to be so, the premature emission of
-semen not admitting it to be perfect. Sometimes, erection is radically
-impossible, and prevents the ejaculation. This was the case with the
-onanist who wrote to Tissot, that the semen would flow, but there was
-no ejaculation. Farther: when there is no erection, either because
-this is impossible, or because the semen is discharged prematurely,
-the person becomes impotent, because the power of procreating requires
-erection and ejaculation.
-
-In persons affected with spermatorrhœa, the seminal fluid must preserve
-its normal characters. It is generally thinner, less opaque, and
-similar to serum: sometimes it resembles a fetid sanies or corrupt
-mucus; in other cases:, the seminal vesicles are evidently affected.
-Sometimes, blood is exhaled from these vesicles, and is even
-ejaculated. We have already stated instances of this emission. Tissot,
-also, has published a case of it. It was a young man, less than sixteen
-years old, who indulged in onanism to such an extent, that blood was
-finally emitted, instead of semen. This emission was soon followed by
-excessive pains, and an inflammation of all the genital organs. We must
-remark, that blood never seems to be discharged, unless the pollution
-is excited directly: this, at least, would seem to follow from the
-cases stated, and particularly from one mentioned by Dalandeterie. The
-erections (said he) always terminate with a more or less abundant flow
-of mucus--perhaps, also, of prostatic fluid, or even of a very diluted
-semen. In ejaculations excited by the hand, a semi-clotted, blackish
-blood comes, instead of semen: sometimes, a teaspoonful is discharged.
-This is always attended with pains, and followed by great prostration.
-
-We have seen that involuntary pollution may take place, like voluntary
-pollution, by the convulsive contraction of the ejaculatory muscles,
-with erection of the penis, and sensations of venery. We have also
-seen, that the semen may be discharged, although the erection of the
-penis, the sensation of venery, and the convulsive contraction of the
-ejaculatory muscles is slight, and almost nothing. When this exists
-to a still greater degree, we have _non-convulsive_ spermatorrhœa, or
-_diurnal involuntary pollution_, as it is called: here there is no
-erection, convulsion, nor ejaculation; there is no feeling of venery;
-the semen flows, instead of being expelled; and there is no feeling of
-pleasure attending this discharge.
-
-This affection may arise from different causes. It is owing most
-frequently to venereal excesses; and, as but little is known in regard
-to it, we shall enlarge on the subject. This pollution for a long time
-was confounded with all the discharges from the urethra, which were
-blended under the term gonorrhœa. A contrary opinion was then adopted,
-and the existence of the disease was denied _in toto_. The remarks
-of several authors, and particularly of Wichmann, Sante Marie, and
-Lallemand, place its existence, however, beyond a doubt. The first
-ideas on this kind of spermatorrhœa may be referred to the earliest
-periods of medicine. It was known to Hippocrates, who has mentioned
-(_De Morbis_, lib. ii., sect. 5) one of the principal symptoms, the
-loss of semen, during the emission of urine, and of feces, when
-describing the tabes dorsalis which affects libertines and those
-lately married. Celsus, also, (_De Medicina_, lib. iv., ch. 28,) has
-admitted that there may be loss of semen, without pleasure, without
-voluptuous dreams, and which may be followed by a fatal consumption.
-After this, we find no mention of the disease for a long period.
-Tauvry says positively, (_Naw. Anat. raisonnée_, 1693, p. 164,) that
-men who abuse themselves are liable to have emissions of semen on
-the slightest compression of the seminal vesicles, when they pass
-urine or feces. Morgagni admits that the semen may escape without any
-pleasurable sensation, as happens from the effect of an injection which
-is too warm, and from the excretion of hardened feces; but he adds,
-that the fluid discharged may come in some from the prostate gland,
-in others, from the seminal vesicles. There is much uncertainty on
-this point of science among authors, many of whom have considered as
-spermatic most of the discharges from the urethra. The dissertation of
-Wichmann, however, on the subject of diurnal pollution, is valuable.
-This dissertation was printed in 1782, at Gœttingen. In it, Wichmann
-states, first, the characters which distinguish diurnal from nocturnal
-pollution. The first occurs when the patient is awake, and without
-his experiencing erection or desire. He is unconscious of it; and
-this circumstance, with the absence of any swelling of the corpora
-cavernosa, and of all venereal ardor, serves to distinguish this
-pollution from the flow of the fluid of the prostate gland, or from a
-loss of semen, which takes place in some persons when they are excited
-by desire. To these characters, Wichmann adds another, drawn from the
-mode in which the excretion of semen takes place. In diurnal pollution,
-(says he,) men do not lose their semen constantly by a continual
-excretion of this fluid, like females subject to leucorrhea; but they
-ejaculate, at a single time: and this circumstance has rendered the
-term pollution applicable to this disease. He does not consider, as
-a diurnal pollution, the gonorrhœa in which the semen is continually
-escaping drop by drop. He, however, doubts the existence of this
-last affection, and remarks that authors are very much confused on
-the subject. Nor would a pollution which was involuntary, and during
-the hours of waking, be considered as a diurnal pollution, if the
-evacuation of semen had been caused by any aphrodisiac substance. And
-on this topic, he relates the case of a man, who, having been addicted
-to onanism in his youth, was affected with involuntary pollutions if a
-blister was applied to him, if he perceived the odor of cantharides, or
-even spoke of them.
-
-According to Wichmann, the semen never escapes with the urine: thus,
-it is not a seminal discharge which comes from persons affected with
-external or internal hemorrhoids, who pass off with their urine a
-milky fluid. He, however, admits, with Hippocrates, that the straining
-of persons at stool often occasions, in those affected with diurnal
-pollution, the discharge of a greater or less quantity of semen. When
-the existence of this affection is suspected, we must attempt to
-ascertain its truth; and for this purpose, the patient should be made
-to urinate freely; and then, in passing the feces, he should sit in
-such a manner that the penis may be outside, and one can see all that
-escapes from it in the efforts at stool. In a diurnal pollution, there
-is rarely as much semen lost as in a nocturnal pollution. The disease
-is quite as serious, if it be semen which escapes--if it occurs once
-a-day, and even more frequently; and at the lightest effort to stool,
-and without any pleasure, to inform one of the risk which is run.
-
-Thus, then, involuntary emissions of semen, while the patient is awake,
-without erection, without pleasure, and while the patient is ignorant
-of it; an emission which takes place, not drop by drop, but at one
-time, and especially while at stool, are, according to Wichmann,
-specific characters of involuntary diurnal pollution.
-
-The general effects of this diurnal pollution, as he has often observed
-them, are those seen in onanists. He remarks:--When you see a man
-extremely thin, pale, stupid, enervated, complaining of great debility,
-especially in the thighs and loins, lazy in his actions, and with
-sunken eyes, you have reason to suspect this cause.
-
-Patients in this state never complain of any absolute pain. Their
-digestive powers are ruined: the appetite, however, continues--even
-increases, and sometimes becomes voracious. After taking food, they
-seem to have more strength; but this advantage is soon paid for, by the
-inconveniences resulting from digestion--especially if that variable
-appetite be too much indulged. As the stomach and most of the other
-viscera do not perform their functions properly, the more that is eaten
-the more the belly is tumefied, by the relaxation of the digestive
-organs. This swelling is attended with a painful feeling of anxiety,
-which exists in these unfortunates at other periods of the day, and
-impels them to avoid society. They are more disposed to sorrow than
-to joy--that is, the news of an unfortunate event brings with it more
-sorrow than that of a happy event causes pleasure. In them, as in
-onanists, there is a want of intelligence; they are stupid; natural
-sleep does not refresh them; the memory and sight are particularly
-debilitated. And this is the state of things, until the patient becomes
-affected with phthisis. At first, neither moral causes, nor affections
-of the soul, nor disappointment, can be suspected. There is apparently
-no viscus affected; nor can we ascribe the disease to any deleterious
-substance concealed in the body, and consuming the flesh. The patient
-has no pain, excepting that obtuse, compressive pain, which is referred
-to the hypochondria, and which depends on the swelling of the weak
-intestines. If you add to the characters the absence of fever, and of
-the ordinary causes of exhaustion, you may be persuaded that diurnal
-pollution exists--that it is the hidden cause of all the symptoms. This
-is a general description of the disease, drawn up from a considerable
-number of cases which we have observed.
-
-Wichmann, also, remarks the resemblance between individuals affected
-with diurnal pollution and those affected with phthisis pulmonalis.
-Experience has taught me, (says he,) that in many patients who have
-been considered as affected with true phthisis, the disease must be
-referred to this cause alone. The symptoms of diurnal pollution are not
-very dissimilar to those of the first period of phthisis pulmonalis,
-at this purely spasmodic period, which I should be tempted to term
-insidious, if I considered merely the difficulty and uncertainty of the
-diagnosis at this period. The cough which then attends some patients,
-also, leads physicians to dread phthisis: or, rather, consumption,
-arising from diurnal pollution, assumes so much the characters and
-form of this disease, that one is disposed to treat it by the ordinary
-method, to the great disparagement of the patient, whose state requires
-opposite remedies. Farther: it is clear, that the disease of which we
-speak must infallibly terminate in phthisis, if it be not soon arrested.
-
-In 1772, Wichmann observed internal pollution for the first time. The
-case was that of a young man, over twenty years of age, who for a long
-time had been affected with spasms. “He was manifestly in a state of
-cachochymia, and of wasting away. The physicians whom he had consulted
-before he came to me judged, from these appearances, that he was
-hypochondriac: in fact, different symptoms led to the belief that the
-disease was situated in the hypochondria. The loss of strength--the
-languor of digestion, although the appetite was not lost--the paleness
-of the countenance--the sadness and pusillanimity which led him to
-seek solitude--the vivid redness which rushed over his cheeks in
-conversation--his restlessness of character--and, finally, a certain
-weakness of intellect--seemed to justify the diagnosis. He had formerly
-indulged with females, and had been affected with venereal disease,
-to which he attributed his present state. Although there was not the
-slightest trace of these old affections, the physician, misled by the
-false conjectures of the patient, had kept him for a long time on
-mercurial preparations, by which the symptoms were aggravated, the true
-cause being overlooked.
-
-“Mercury was then abandoned for tonics; and the ferruginous waters were
-employed, with the idea that the patient suffered from hypochondria.
-But this was no better than the former treatment; and the patient
-begged me to take charge of him. I could not attribute the extreme
-thinness which existed to the remnant of an imperfectly cured venereal
-affection, nor to the usual cause of exhaustion and fever. I then
-asked the patient if he indulged with females, or in onanism; or if
-he was affected with involuntary loss of semen. He almost swore to
-the contrary. I then told him of his obligation to speak the truth,
-and assured him that I should not prescribe for him until he was
-attentively examined. Some days after, he came to me again, and told
-me that he had been affected with something like loss of semen. I
-satisfied myself that the observation was correct. The cause of the
-evil being known, the treatment was simple. In a few months, the
-patient was restored to health; and this happy effect of the remedies
-proved that we had attacked the origin of the evil.
-
-“This young man had probably indulged in premature excesses: in fact,
-this is the most usual cause of involuntary pollution. All the patients
-observed by me, (says Wichmann,) were from twenty-five to forty years
-old. All were addicted to the pleasures of love, or to onanism; or had
-become affected with blenorrhœa, by intercourse with diseased women.
-
-“I am led to believe,” (adds he,) “that the effects of onanism would
-not be so pernicious, were it not for this diurnal pollution; that
-without it, this shameful habit would not be followed with consumption,
-and other symptoms of phthisis. In fact, onanism does not always give
-rise to this pollution. If this were the case, the number of onanists
-affected with consumption would be very great. The number of men
-addicted to this vice from early childhood is immense; for we do not
-know a greater scourge than this social corruption. From the fact, too,
-that onanism sometimes produces involuntary diurnal pollution, we ought
-to investigate if it does not exist in those who have renounced this
-pernicious habit. Advice to them would be useless, inasmuch as, having
-renounced this vice, they do not suspect the enervating cause which
-destroys them. About eighteen years ago, before I had discovered this
-cause of consumption, I knew a young man, thirty years old, who had
-been addicted to masturbation from the time he was ten years old, and
-who learned this pernicious habit from his preceptor. He died, after
-experiencing all kinds of infirmities, with extreme debility of all
-his physical and moral faculties. He acknowledged his error, and that
-for a long time he had renounced his bad habit; but his late return to
-continence did not save him. Now, I feel confident that this shameful
-habit had brought on an involuntary diurnal pollution, which caused his
-death.”
-
-Wichmann remarks, that it is at the commencement of the fine season of
-spring that the patients are most conscious of their situation. They
-owe this increase of their ills (says he) to that general procreative
-faculty which becomes more active in all animated beings at this period
-of the year. The more full the vesicles of semen, the more liable are
-patients to lose it. We must also remark, that most patients secrete
-prolific semen, and preserve their procreative power. This, however,
-requires the patient to have the faculty of erection; for, otherwise,
-he would be impotent. This was the case with an individual, whose case
-is stated by Henry Van-Hers.
-
-A young man of rich family, and who had arrived at puberty, consulted
-this physician, avowing, that from the time he was ten years old, he
-had enjoyed frequent intercourse with young girls, who had excited him
-by their lascivious touches; adding, that from this period the power
-of erection had disappeared. He had travelled for a long time, and
-had received advice from several French physicians. He went to the Spa
-waters, and there his case was examined by Van-Hers. The sensibility
-and weakness of the genital organs were so great, that on the slightest
-touch, and without any desire for coition, or any sensation, there was
-a discharge similar to thin milk. This excretion continued both night
-and day, whenever he passed urine, or on the least rubbing of his
-shirt. A great many remedies had already been tried. Van-Hers regarded
-the disease as incurable, but the young man would not listen to his
-advice; and being very rich, he continued to travel in Italy, France,
-England, and Germany, in the hope of recovering his lost virility.
-He consulted many physicians. He then had recourse to quacks; and
-even tried the powers of magic: but all in vain. After six years of
-travel, he returned to Van-Hers, regretting that he had not taken his
-advice. The young man then returned home, deploring the advantages of a
-large fortune, which rendered him the victim of a precocious abuse of
-pleasure, of a kind of premature depravity.
-
-Wichmann’s dissertation was but little known in France, when Sainte
-Marie undertook its translation; and not only this, but added many
-important notes, which have shed new light on diurnal pollution.
-Wichmann had said, as we have seen, that patients affected with this
-disease _ejaculated_ the semen. This expression was inexact, and has
-been rectified by M. Sainte Marie. The patients (said he) do not
-ejaculate the semen; but it runs away from them: it is not emitted with
-force. The characters which it presents had briefly been alluded to by
-Wichmann: his translator has stated them more clearly. According to
-him, the semen which runs away in diurnal pollution is paler, thinner,
-and more watery, than that which escapes when the act is attended with
-pleasure. Its odor, also, is fainter; and the stains it leaves on the
-linen are slight, superficial, and not very apparent. Wichmann had
-admitted the existence of a discharge from the prostate gland, which
-ought not to be confounded with diurnal pollution. Sainte Marie has
-attempted to point out the characteristics of this discharge. Those in
-whom it exists, (says he,) find the glans moistened in the morning when
-they rise with an unctuous substance: if they then compress the urethra
-from the root to the end of the penis, they press out some drops of a
-greenish, gluish, and slightly fetid fluid. They thus lose a little of
-this fluid after indulging in desires, or after erections which have
-not been followed by the act of venery. Sainte Marie considers it as
-probable that the mucus of the urethra then mixes with the fluid of the
-prostate gland, and forms a part of the discharge.
-
-This author confirms Wichmann’s remarks on the general effects of
-diurnal pollution. He says, “Since I read his treatise, I have found
-this pollution in diseases of languor, which I could not attribute to
-a special or primitive alteration of any organ; and I have discovered,
-that a great many cases of hypochondria, of slow nervous fevers, of
-consumptions, were kept up by this kind of gonorrhœa, to which the
-patients, unable to observe themselves, had paid no attention. I have
-known several individuals, who have been affected with this diurnal
-pollution for a long time, without experiencing any marked derangement
-in their health: to them, it was an inconvenience; rather than a
-disease. But in these cases, diurnal pollution is not habitual: it only
-occurs when continence of days or weeks, an exciting or substantial
-regimen, long exercise on horseback or in a carriage, have accumulated
-semen in its reservoirs, or have irritated specially the genital
-organs: then the least effort to expel the feces causes the seminal
-vesicles to pour forth the surplus of fluid which they contain. Let not
-this state inspire too much security. Diurnal pollution is commenced:
-it is not yet serious; but it may progress, return every day at
-each evacuation, and finally produce all the bad results noticed by
-Wichmann.”
-
-Wichmann said nothing in regard to the organic conditions of the
-diurnal pollution: he merely stated that this affection was the
-result of debility. M. Sainte Marie, on this point, makes many
-interesting remarks. He considers diurnal pollution as sometimes
-the cause, and sometimes the effect, of dorsal consumption; and he
-considers this to be an affection of the spinal marrow. We will quote
-this passage:--Diurnal pollution (says Sainte Marie) is sometimes
-only an effect; the origin of which must be sought after in a serious
-and primitive alteration of an important system of organs. Thus, we
-must reason, for instance, in respect to dorsal consumption. It is
-said, that one remarkable symptom of this disease is an abundant
-discharge of watery semen, which comes sometimes at each emission
-of urine. Involuntary diurnal pollution is here only a symptom: it
-occurs, because the genital organs do not receive, _from the spinal
-marrow_, the nervous and well regulated influence which they require
-to perform their functions properly. Hence, the super-abundant
-secretion of semen--its unfitness for fecundation--the relaxation of
-the seminal vesicles, which allow it to escape so readily--the atony
-of the scrotum--the inconvenient pulling of the spermatic vessels--the
-weakness of the erections--impotence, &c., &c. The same state of the
-organs which deprives the genital organs of life, explains, on the
-other hand, the wasting of parts which respond to this sensitive
-centre--the thinness of the loins, thighs, and lower extremities--the
-debility--the paralysis of these extremities--the obstinate
-constipation, complained of by the patients, and which is similar
-to that of old men, yielding only to the employment of stimuli--the
-formications along the back--the incontinence of urine--the gangrenous
-eschars, which at a more advanced period of the disease form on the
-sacrum, hips, and trochanters. We might easily pursue this subject,
-and extend it to the most general symptoms of consumption, as deep
-melancholy, weakness and slowness of the pulse, disposition to faint,
-and all those marked symptoms which assimilate this disease to slow
-nervous fever; but this would estrange us from the principle we seek to
-establish--which is, that diurnal pollution is sometimes the cause,
-and sometimes only the symptom, of dorsal consumption. Wichmann has
-treated only of the first: the second is connected with a general
-disease, and cannot be studied separately. These remarks of Sainte
-Marie will be admitted to be much more important, if compared with our
-remarks on the abuse of the genital organs on the spinal marrow, and
-with what we shall say hereafter on the power which this has on the
-same organs.
-
-Swediaur, who was acquainted with and approved of Wichmann’s work,
-admits, in addition to the diurnal pollution described by this latter,
-and which he considers as arising either from relaxation or from
-irritation of the testicles and seminal passages--he admits, we say, a
-blenorrhœa of the prostate gland, the characters of which, as stated by
-him, are precisely similar to those of diurnal pollution. Blenorrhœa of
-the prostate gland (says he) is a morbid discharge of the mucus from
-this gland, sometimes mingled with the fluid of the seminal vesicles.
-It occurs particularly during the day, and without venereal desire.
-This disease is soon followed with general debility or weakness: this
-exhaustion is attended with emaciation of the body, and is followed
-by death, if the patient delays consulting a well-educated physician,
-as is too often the case; or if the proper remedies are not used in
-time. He admits, also, that the discharge from the prostate gland does
-not occur in some individuals, except when they go to stool; and that
-hardened feces, in passing through the rectum, press the prostate
-gland more firmly. The discharge is clear mucus, and of a particularly
-nauseous odor. Cullerier describes two kinds of spermatorrhœa: one
-with loss of semen and of the prostate fluid; the other, produced by
-constipation. He remarks--Persons who are habitually costive often see
-a few drops of semen ooze from the penis, while they are at stool.
-We have been consulted several times for cases of this kind. Some
-regard it as resulting from a relaxation, a debility of the genital
-organs: they imagine that their genital powers are lost, and that their
-procreative power is lost. Others attribute it to old blenorrhœas,
-which have _struck in_, as it is said. All, generally, are terrified
-at the effect; and quacks have often profited by its existence, to
-persuade patients that they were affected with an inveterate venereal
-disease, and thus to dispose of their remedies. This effect arises, as
-every one knows, from the pressure of the feces in the rectum on the
-seminal vesicles, and may be removed by removing the constipation.
-
-This was the state of science, when Lallemand devoted himself to the
-study of the diseases of the urinary passages, and enriched it with
-many important remarks. As, in acute inflammations of the urethra,
-the irritation sometimes extends, following the course of the seminal
-passages to the testicles; so, in retentions of urine, produced by
-chronic inflammation of the prostatic portion of the urethra, the
-irritation extends more or less to the seminal vesicles and testicles,
-producing in the former normal contractions, and in the latter an
-excessive secretion, whence would result a spermatic flux. In patients
-thus affected, the ejaculation is very sudden: nocturnal pollutions
-are frequent--or, rather, the semen is expelled during the emission
-of urine, and of the feces. It is also more liquid, less odorous, and
-in short less elaborated than usual. In many patients, the venereal
-desires are nearly extinct; the erections are feeble, imperfect, or
-even impossible. This spermatorrhœa has general effects, analogous to
-those which have been attributed to other pollutions: the patients
-become timid, idle, indifferent to all which is not connected with
-their disease; all the functions of the economy languish, and are
-deranged; and, finally, both body and mind are degraded.
-
-Lallemand has known all the phenomena which we have described to
-disappear, on curing the retention of urine--or, rather, the disease
-of the urethra which caused it--and relates cases of this character.
-Do not the remarks of this practitioner, compared with our remarks on
-convulsive spermatorrhœa, and particularly on the different states
-which the semen may present in this affection--do they not establish
-clearly, that in many, perhaps in most cases of spermatorrhœa, there is
-not relaxation, weakness of the seminal vesicles and ejaculatory ducts,
-but irritation or inflammation of these parts?
-
-It would, then, seem well established, that the semen may be discharged
-without pleasure, without erection, and without ejaculation; and that
-this discharge may give rise to accidents analogous to those observed
-after all free discharges of this fluid, arising from any cause
-whatever. This fact, however, has been contested by different authors.
-Boerhaave says positively, that he has never known the semen to escape
-spontaneously, without solicitation; and that when such a case has
-been suspected, the fluid discharged was not probably semen; and that,
-farther, if this kind of spermatorrhœa exists, it must be very rare.
-Swammerdam, Hunter, and Haller, have expressed a similar opinion: the
-latter admits that a discharge may take place from the penis, under the
-circumstances mentioned above; he thinks, also, that this discharge
-comes from the prostate gland and seminal vesicles. But the fluid
-which escapes is only the mucus secreted by these parts--it is not
-semen; and unless opinions had been made up from wrong evidence, wrong
-consequences, it would not have been attributed to it. At present, the
-opinion that all cases of spermatorrhœa are only blenorrhœas, is still
-very prevalent. Descamps, physician at Castilliones, having brought
-before the Medical Society, in 1821, two cases of spermatorrhœa, the
-consequences of masturbation; Chantourelle, who was the reporter,
-raised some doubts, which the society seemed to admit, as to the nature
-of the discharge, thinking it was mucous, rather than spermatic. We,
-however, are disposed to think, that when the subject of diurnal
-pollution is better understood, it will be observed more frequently,
-and then its existence will not be denied. It is with the hope of
-contributing to this result, that we have dwelt so long on the subject.
-
-If the imperceptible loss of semen may be followed by all the symptoms
-which are referred to it, it is evident that those authors who have
-advanced that the emission of semen should be counted as nothing in
-the influence of the act of venery, and that the nervous disturbance
-which attends it is the only cause of its consequences--those authors,
-we say, who assert this, have advanced too positive an opinion, and
-are consequently mistaken. The same may be said of those who ascribe
-the danger of venereal excesses simply to the discharge of urine. It
-is well ascertained, that those individuals who have carried the act
-of onanism to such an extent as to procure enjoyment without losing
-semen, have finally became diseased, and their constitution has been
-impaired. Instances of this might be cited. Fournier and Begin mention
-that of a young man, who, at the moment of ejaculation, compressed the
-remote parts of the urethra, so that not a drop of semen was lost.
-The fatigue, however, following efforts of this kind was very great,
-notwithstanding these exertions. Finally, the strength diminished, and
-the person wasted away as much as if the semen had been discharged.
-(_Dict. des Sc. Med._, Art. _Masturbation_.)
-
-There is frequently some derangement in the functions of the testicles,
-in those who have lost the genital sense, where the penis is no
-longer capable of erection, or who are affected by one or other of
-the pollutions mentioned by us. But these organs may be affected more
-evidently. In many onanists, these parts are extremely tender, or
-more or less vivid pains are felt, which extend along the cord. These
-symptoms sometimes assume an evidently neuralgic character; and it
-may readily be imagined, that, in individuals affected with wandering
-pains, excesses in venery may fix them in these parts. This has been
-remarked in gout. Hallé and M. Guilbert observed, in a middle-aged
-man addicted to excesses of this character, a severe pain in the
-left testicle, unattended by swelling, which extended to the whole
-surface of this organ: this pain followed an attack of articular
-gout. Irritation of the testicles sometimes constitutes an attack of
-orchitis--that is, an inflammation, which, among other consequences,
-may be attended with the loss of these parts. Brodie has published two
-cases of this character. The first was that of a young man, thirty
-years old, who entered St. George’s Hospital in 1805, affected with
-pains in the left testicle. This testicle was soft, flabby, and one
-third smaller than that of the opposite side. The patient had never
-received a blow on this part, nor had he been affected with blenorrhœa;
-but he admitted, that for five years he had been addicted to onanism,
-and that a day seldom passed without his indulgence. Before wasting
-away, the testicle had been the seat of a swelling, which had been
-preceded by severe pains. These pains had continued to be felt, and
-the disease was attended with such a degree of moral depression,
-that the countenance of the patient assumed a sombre and melancholy
-character. This young man was treated by various remedies, but he left
-the hospital uncured. The other patient, on applying to Mr. Brodie, in
-1820, was thirty-one years old. Here the two testicles were wasted, and
-the patient was impotent. This man stated that his intercourse with
-females began when he was fourteen years old; that he had indulged
-excessively for many years; that, when twenty years old, in consequence
-of external violence, he was affected with severe inflammation of the
-testicles; that this inflammation had been completely cured; and that
-the wasting of the testicles had commenced some time afterward. In
-three years, the testicles had shrunk to their present size. (_London
-Med. and Phys. Journal_, October, 1826.)
-
-According to Morgagni, the too frequent return of venereal ideas will
-produce varicocele and hydrocele. Some authors, also, place venereal
-excesses among the causes of the first of these two diseases, and also
-of circosele. We have seen several cases of varicose dilatation of the
-spermatic cord and testicle in onanists. This fact is also confirmed
-by Breschet, in his memoir read at the Academy of Sciences, Jan. 13th,
-1834. He thinks that circosele and varicocele are by no means diseases
-of adult and old age, but that they are seen most frequently in young
-men. These affections seem to him to be caused most particularly by
-venereal excesses. He adds, that the varicose tumors of the bursæ,
-and the organs they contain, are not only very troublesome, causing
-severe pain in the cord, but that in some patients they cause extreme
-melancholy.
-
-One consequence of onanism, which has been omitted by Deslandes, may
-be stated here. We allude to the smallness of the genital organs. In
-several severe cases of onanism, which have fallen under the notice
-of Dr. A. Sidney Doane, of New-York, this important feature has
-been observed. The same fact has been remarked by Professor John W.
-Francis, of New-York; Professor Otto, of Germany; and by other eminent
-pathologists.
-
-Excesses in masturbation and coition, _in females_, cause affection of
-the several organs much more frequently than in males. By too frequent
-titillation, the clitoris may become enormously large. This cause (says
-Bouillaud) may determine schirrous engorgement, or even a cancerous
-degenerescence of this organ. The most frequent alteration, however,
-of the genital organs of the female, which may be thus produced, is
-an inflammation of the membrane which lines the vulva and vagina.
-This inflammation is constantly indicated by a more or less abundant
-leucorrhœal discharge, and often by swelling, redness, and pain.
-When this discharge continues, which is often the case, it occasions
-in young females symptoms analogous to those of diurnal pollution.
-The complexion loses its color, and becomes yellowish; the eyes are
-constantly suffused, and the countenance is sad; the patients are
-feeble and careless; they generally experience gnawing sensations in
-the epigastric region; and, thinking that these are occasioned by
-hunger, are constantly eating. Sometimes, the appetite is voracious,
-and the digestive powers are preserved; but these are commonly soon
-altered. Severe and constant pains are often felt in the back and
-epigastrium; the body wastes; and a short, dry, and frequent cough,
-renders the patient, parents, and sometimes the physician, anxious
-as to the state of the chest. Add to these symptoms those already
-described, when speaking of the general effects of masturbation, and
-you have the state most frequently presented by girls addicted to this
-habit.
-
-As females have no testicles, nor organs which, like the testicles in
-the male, serve to prepare and excrete the semen, they cannot have
-seminal pollutions: they, however, like men, are subject to voluptuous
-dreams, and then there may be a secretion, analogous to that which
-exists in them at the moment of the act of venery. May a too frequent
-return of this symptom have any influence on the health? The only
-remarks on the subject, to our knowledge, are to be found in Swediaur.
-He says, when speaking of diurnal pollution--I have seen, although much
-more rarely, similar diseases in the other sex. I have under treatment,
-at this moment, a female, twenty-eight years old, who, since her
-miscarriage, a year and a half ago, suffers from frequent involuntary
-nocturnal pollutions, excited by libidinous dreams, and attended with
-all the symptoms of the tabes dorsalis, described by Hippocrates, as a
-disease of the male. Even the lungs begin to feel this disease. She,
-however, has been cured.
-
-Inflammation of the external organs of generation, and the fluor albus,
-resulting from it, is most generally, at least in young girls who have
-not arrived at puberty, a consequence of onanism. We are convinced,
-too, that if it were possible to arrive at the facts, we should find
-that the cause of fluor albus in adults was either recent or former
-abuses. Whenever we have addressed females on the subject, to ascertain
-this fact, our conjectures have been verified. This has frequently been
-the case with servant girls. We have seen several, who were so weakened
-by fluor albus, and the irritation of the sexual parts, that they have
-been obliged to quit their situations, being unable to do their duty.
-We will even say, that the most sincere of these girls have given me
-such information as to their habits, that we suspect most of this class
-of onanism.
-
-Besides, all authors who have spoken of leucorrhœa and blenorrhœa in
-females, have mentioned excesses in masturbation and coition as among
-their most frequent causes. It would be easy to adduce general evidence
-and special cases in support of this proposition; but this would be
-useless.
-
-For the same reasons, we may state, that diseases of the uterus may
-very frequently be determined by these excesses, and more particularly
-by those of coition. Daily observation proves that acute and chronic
-inflammations of the body and neck of the uterus frequently appear in
-those females who have indulged in premature enjoyments.
-
-We have attended, for more than ten years, a lady affected with chronic
-metritis, arising from this cause. This lady had began to masturbate
-before she was eleven years old. She soon became affected with fluor
-albus, from which she has never been free since. When eighteen years
-old, she married a vigorous man, and then became addicted to another
-kind of excess. She now experienced constant pains in the loins, lower
-part of the belly, and in the groins: she was also troubled with a
-disagreeable feeling of fatigue in the upper part of the thighs, and
-experienced as it were a weight, as if something was constantly trying
-to escape from the sexual parts. The neck of the uterus, instead of
-retaining its usual situation, proved on examination to be almost
-at the external orifice of the vagina. Our advice, as to moderation
-and abstinence, was but imperfectly followed: she was so addicted to
-onanism, that, although she indulged lawfully, and was the mother
-of several children, she continued in this habit. It may readily be
-imagined that she did not derive much benefit from my advice: in fact,
-the symptoms mentioned above, and many others, still continue. Similar
-cases are related by other authors, and have fallen under the notice of
-almost every practitioner.
-
-In this case, there was evidently _prolapsus uteri_, or a falling
-of the womb: the neck of the uterus was almost at the vulva. This
-displacement, which is the usual consequence of inflammations of
-the body of the uterus, very often results, like it, from venereal
-excesses. This fact has been noticed by all writers on this subject.
-Schirrous and cancerous affections of the neck of the uterus, also,
-arise from this cause. Cullerier remarks, that uterine affections
-in females are loo frequently the sad and cruel consequence of
-solitary manœuvres. Richerand, after stating that premature or too
-frequent indulgence is a cause of cancer of the uterus, says, that of
-forty-seven females affected with this disease, eleven had indulged
-with males before the period of puberty, seven at this period, and
-most of them were barren. He adds, that those public girls who escape
-venereal disease generally die of cancer of the uterus. Bayle and Cayol
-have attempted to verify this assertion, by examining numerous cases,
-but they have obtained no marked result; which is not surprising,
-considering the number of causes, which, especially in hospitals,
-render such investigations useless. The influence of excessive
-indulgence, in producing such a disease, is very great. A short time
-since, we were called to a lady, who had a slight syphilitic ulceration
-of the neck of the uterus. She, however, still admitted the embraces
-of her husband, although they were painful, and were followed by a
-discharge of blood. The parenchyma of the neck, around the ulceration,
-was gradually engorged: it became schirrous, then cancerous, and
-the patient finally died. Probably, coition had great influence in
-developing this disease. Such a thing might happen frequently; for
-Ricord has shown, that superficial ulcerations of the neck of the
-uterus are frequent. The cancers which affect these parts, in public
-women, are, probably, often produced in this manner.
-
-In the lady whose case has been mentioned, the act of coition produced
-a discharge of blood from the vulva. We have seen cases of a similar
-character, where the neck of the uterus presented no evidence of
-organic alteration to the touch. Females in whom this occurs should,
-however, be very careful in their pleasures, as this slight accident
-indicates a bad state of the system, and one which should be
-mistrusted. Sometimes, blood appears on return of coition, when females
-have not indulged for a long time. Rondelon cites an instance of this.
-It occurred in a lady from whom her husband had been absent for three
-years: at the end of this period, he returned. The frequency of coition
-the first night caused excessive uterine hemorrhage. A similar accident
-may result from this act, and a fortiori from its abuse, during or
-just before the menstrual period. Very serious hemorrhages have often
-occurred in consequence of excessive copulations. Tissot states--In
-1746, a girl, twenty-three years old, submitted to the embraces of six
-Spanish dragoons, at a house near the gates of Montpelier. She died
-the next day, from excessive hemorrhage of the uterus. A similar case
-has been related by Virey. We know (said he) that a public woman, who
-submitted in one night to twenty-one soldiers, the next day died, with
-hemorrhage of the uterus. This was a dark, thin woman, in the flower
-of her age. (_Dict. des Sc. Med._, vol. xiv., p. 339.) Onanism causes
-in young women, and even in children, a discharge of blood from the
-vulva. This fact was mentioned by Duges. The blood lost is then never
-abundant, and the occurrence is by no means serious.
-
-The irritation produced or kept up by too frequent coition, is very
-often the cause of sterility. Even as, generally speaking, an inflamed
-surface refuses to absorb substances applied to it, so irritation of
-the uterus and vagina renders them unfit for impregnation. Thus, then,
-libertinism, instead of adding, as we might think, to the chances of
-fecundation, acts in a contrary manner. Marc remarks, that two hundred
-public girls do not produce more than two or three children annually.
-Farther: it seems well ascertained, that if these girls resume a
-regular life, they again become fruitful. The English, wishing to
-people Botany Bay, transported there a large number of public women.
-Those who were sterile in their own country proved fruitful, when
-subjected to the rigid laws of marriage. Is it not notorious, too, that
-among the public girls, those who bear children are not those most
-frequently liable to become mothers? De Chanes, physician at Macon, has
-established, by statistical researches, that but few conceptions take
-place in the early months of marriage--that is, when the congress of
-the sexes is most frequent, and causes the most irritation. Villermé
-has ascertained the same to be true in the early days, and even the
-early weeks, after marriage. Hence, this learned physician regards
-the fecundity of copulations as being inversely as their frequency.
-It may, then, be stated as a fact, that females may become barren, in
-consequence of venereal abuses.
-
-These abuses are not only injurious, as opposing reproduction, but
-they also injure, by causing a deterioration of the human family.
-Marc asserts, that the few children born of prostitutes rarely have
-the strength and health of those born in lawful wedlock; and that the
-mortality of the former is fifty per cent greater than of the latter.
-Too early marriages are attended with results similar to those arising
-from libertinism. Aristotle mentioned this fact. Delafontaine, first
-surgeon of the last king of Poland, attributes the extreme physical
-debility of the Polish Jews to these premature marriages. Marc
-says--It is proved, that the physical strength of the child depends,
-in the main, on the mother, rather than on the father; and this is
-confirmed, too, by referring to domestic animals. The height of the
-pony depends on the mare, rather than on the stallion. Mules, too,
-furnish a striking proof of this. The eggs of pullets, whatever may be
-the size of the cock, are much smaller than those of hens. Farther: it
-is well known, that females who become mothers before attaining their
-strength, generally give birth to small children, which are raised with
-difficulty.
-
-We have seen in a former page, that men had recourse to artificial
-means to procure a semblance of coition. Accidents of a similar
-character have happened to girls; and they have been obliged to call
-in surgeons to their assistance. There are numerous instances, where
-foreign bodies have been introduced into the vagina, and particularly
-into the urethra, and could not be withdrawn. We shall mention some
-of them. Pamard has reported that of a girl, thirty-one years old,
-who used an ivory whistle, three inches and a half long, and five
-lines round in its centre. This she introduced, not into the vagina,
-but into the urethra. One day, it entered so far, that she could not
-remove it. After many efforts, it was withdrawn, with polypus forceps.
-Another girl, seventeen years old, was less fortunate. She was in the
-habit of introducing a large piece of wood into the urethra. This
-instrument having entered very deeply, fell into the bladder. Faure
-was called, and was obliged to cut for it, to extract it. Rigal was
-obliged to do the same, to relieve a young girl, twenty years old, who
-used a wooden needle-case in masturbating. Needles and pins have often
-escaped into these passages. Morgagni asserts that it is by no means
-unfrequent in Italy for the lascivious girls to introduce into the
-urethra the golden pins worn in their hair, and that they sometimes
-fall into the bladder. This they conceal for a long time; but they
-are finally obliged, through pain, to confess their fault. Moinichien
-mentions a Venetian girl, whom Molinetti relieved of a golden needle,
-which had slipped from the hand into this organ. In 1751, Lachese,
-(according to Morand’s report,) was called to a girl twenty years old,
-who had introduced into the urethra a toothpick, which she had lost;
-and after two months, it was extracted. A happy circumstance favored
-Lamotte in a similar case. An old maid had introduced into the bladder
-a very large pin. Having sounded several times very patiently and
-attentively, Lamotte finally felt the pin distinctly. He sounded for
-the fourth time, when, by accident, it became engaged in the sound.
-Wishing to withdraw it, and finding some resistance, he introduced his
-finger into the vagina, and ascertained whence it proceeded. By skilful
-manipulation, he now succeeded in withdrawing it. These symptoms
-usually happen only in those who are imprudent, and who introduce
-into the urethra an instrument designed for an adjacent passage. The
-vagina is so short and large, that foreign bodies seldom remain in
-it. For such a thing to take place, certain conditions are requisite,
-which are not very common. This, however, is possible; and many cases
-of it are recorded. The following is mentioned by Dupuytren. A female
-consulted him for some derangement in the vulvo-uterine passage. On
-examination, a foreign body was felt, the nature of which could not at
-first be determined. The patient refused to give any information on the
-subject: by examining, however, it was found that the body presented a
-large opening or deep cavity. The tumefied walls of the vagina covering
-the edges of the kind of vessel, prevented its disengagement. After
-much effort, however, the body was removed; and it proved to be a
-pomatum-pot, which had been introduced by its base. (_Additions à la
-Med. Operat., de Sabatier_; vol. iv., p. 96.)
-
-
-
-
-PART SECOND.
-
-
-
-
-RULES OF PRESERVATION AND TREATMENT RELATIVE TO VENEREAL EXCESSES.
-
-
-There are two indications, which embrace every thing relating to
-venereal excesses. The first is, to prevent the bad effects; the
-second, to remedy them. To _preserve_, to _recruit_, is what these
-excesses require. Hence, some of the remedial measures must be
-hygienic, and others therapeutic. To these, we shall devote two
-chapters of this second part.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-PRESERVATIVE MEANS RELATIVE TO VENEREAL EXCESSES.
-
-
-The preservative rules which relate to venereal excesses present
-fundamental differences, as to the success and facility of their
-application, according as reference is made to the act of masturbation
-or coition. Let us point out these differences.
-
-Coition is an act, the mode and purport of which, considered in a
-scientific point of view, are legitimate; and which, consequently,
-is lawful, so long as the constitution and health are unimpaired.
-Hence, it should not be prohibited, except when abused--that is,
-when indulged in too often, or under circumstances which render it
-injurious. Except in these cases, it may be permitted, or even advised.
-When it is forbidden, the advice is generally understood, as it is
-commonly addressed to adults, children having neither the power nor
-the opportunity to indulge in coition. This advice may be easily
-followed, as the individual who indulges in coition to excess, may
-find it absolutely impossible to indulge: in fact, means to satisfy
-his taste can only be found by the concurrence of another. Hence, it
-is only necessary to shun this concurrence, to render this kind of
-excess impossible. To address one’s self to the reason of an adult--or,
-rather, of a young man--and to create for him, if he cannot create
-for himself, obstacles to sexual relations, these are the only two
-preservative indications which abuses of coition require. We have
-discharged the first, or have stated the mode of fulfilling it, by
-mentioning the bad consequences attending these abuses, and by making
-known the circumstances which render the act of venery injurious to
-those addicted to it. Hence, we shall not return to the subject. The
-second indication can find no place in a book, and consequently will
-not detain us. Our remedies, then, as to preservation, will apply
-exclusively to onanism. In a subsequent page, when we are treating of
-the restorative remedies, the distinction here laid down between this
-habit and coition will disappear; and we can then treat of all venereal
-excesses conjointly.
-
-Although coition, if confined within certain limits, and under certain
-circumstances, may not be forbidden, this is not the case with
-masturbation. This latter indulgence has nothing legitimate in it;
-and nothing respectable--nothing which can palliate the veto of the
-physician. We are aware that onanism is not always necessarily followed
-by any inconvenience or danger; but, practically, this distinction
-disappears. But onanism, without regard to the mode, its frequence, or
-the individuals or circumstances under which it occurs, may always be
-considered an abuse, and, consequently, be earnestly proscribed.
-
-This view of the subject rests on two facts: one is fundamental,
-and applies to all individuals, without distinction of age, sex,
-or constitution; the other relates only to those who are addicted
-to onanism, before they are perfectly formed and constituted. The
-first of these motives is founded on this, that when this practice
-is not actually bad, it may constantly be suspected of becoming so.
-When onanism once commences, it is difficult to say how far it will
-extend. The taste for it, and the facility of indulging in it at night,
-and often in the day, cause this habit to be in a measure indulged
-in without limits. It becomes so soon imperious, and the despotism
-it exercises is so absolute, that we ought always to attempt its
-prevention. It should be regarded as a scourge, and be treated as
-such, without waiting for the bad effects which may result from it.
-This course is still more necessary, when children, young patients,
-and individuals who have not attained their growth, are interested.
-When maturity arrives, the evil is possible; before it happens, it
-is probable, and often certain. Farther: our remarks on precocious
-enjoyments prevent our recurring to the subject.
-
-Before speaking of the preservative means, a question presents itself.
-How can it be told when these means may be used? or, in other words,
-what are the signs which indicate that an individual is an onanist, or
-may become so? The suspicion may extend very far: in fact, every age is
-exposed to it, as onanism is possible from early life to old age: it,
-however, belongs to the age before puberty. A great many young girls
-and boys masturbate: hence, this maybe suspected of every one. This
-habit is less frequent, but it is far from being rare. The precautions
-to prevent onanism, and constant vigilance, should then be exercised
-constantly towards children and young people--in fact, towards all who
-are not of mature age. This rule is an important one; and cannot be
-neglected, without exposing one to danger and to deep regrets.
-
-It would be desirable to ascertain the existence of onanism before its
-effects appear; but this is seldom the case. There is in children a
-kind of instinct which leads them to conceal this manœuvre, although
-they have not learned that it is an illicit act. The art with which
-they elude vigilance is often inconceivable. Watch where the child
-goes. Have an eye to him who seeks solitude--who remains a long time
-alone, and who cannot give a good account of himself. Be watchful
-about the periods of lying down and of rising. At this time, the
-onanist may be detected in the act. His hands are never out of bed,
-and his face is often hidden under the bed-clothes. Soon after lying
-down, he appears sound asleep: this circumstance, which always causes
-distrust in the experienced man, is one of those which contribute the
-most to inspire the parents with a feeling of security. The affectation
-of sleep in the young person may serve to detect him. When approached,
-he is frequently found red, and covered with sweat, although neither
-the temperature of the chamber, the weight of bed-clothes, nor any
-other cause, can explain this state: at the same time, the respiration
-is more hurried, the pulse is fuller, harder, and more frequent; the
-veins are larger, and the heat is greater, than usual; in fine, there
-is that kind of fever, of general turgescence, which usually attends
-the act of venery.
-
-When the young person is disturbed suddenly, his hands, if he has not
-had time to remove them, will be found on or near the genital organs.
-The penis, also, may be found in a state of erection; or you may even
-find marks of recent pollution, which might be known by the peculiar
-odor arising from the semen, and which comes from the soiled fingers.
-Have an eye to those young persons, whose hands, when in bed, or during
-sleep, are in the position described: they are onanists, or will
-become so. The same is true in those who frequently have erections
-of the penis. This erection, and this attitude, are certainly not
-positive signs of onanism; but they are the probable, or precursory
-signs of it: they should not, then, be neglected. The stains of semen,
-on the bed-clothes or dress, may also increase suspicion. When the
-patients are very young, they are not very evident, the fluid which
-they emit not having the characters of real semen: the traces which
-it leaves, however, are too remarkable, not to cause suspicion as to
-their origin. In those who have attained the age of puberty, there
-would be nothing equivocal: the only question then would be, that they
-might be produced by involuntary pollution. On this topic, we would
-remark, that this pollution seldom occurs before the age of fifteen or
-sixteen years, and is seldom frequent before twenty. When involuntary
-discharges of semen are frequent in young persons, you may be assured
-that they are the indirect results of onanism: hence, there is reason
-to regard stains of semen as positive proofs of onanism, when the
-patients have not attained the age of puberty; and as more probable
-signs of this habit, when older, if these stains be frequent.
-
-A loss of color, or an earthy tint of the countenance--a violet
-appearance of the eyelids--a languid expression of face--an air
-of fatigue and _nonchalance_, when the patient rises from bed--a
-difficulty in getting up--are all signs which may lead to the discovery
-of this pernicious habit. Here we might trace the physical state
-produced by onanism, if this had not already been done. Unfortunately,
-it is consumption which sounds the alarm; and this disease must be
-advanced, too, before the parents seek the cause. Sometimes, the true
-cause is overlooked, and all remedies are directed to an imaginary one.
-We will admit, however, that it is not always easy to refer the wasting
-caused by masturbation to its real origin. A young man, although not
-addicted to onanism, may lose his strength, grow thin, and present,
-both morally and physically, the characters belonging to this habit:
-this effect is often produced by intestinal worms, by dentition,
-puberty, by a too rapid growth of the body, &c.; and likewise by some
-chronic diseases of the stomach, intestines, liver, lungs, heart, &c.
-Hence, we should not be too quick to attribute to masturbation a state
-which may be produced by other causes. The practitioner who would
-pronounce too precipitately that a patient indulged in onanism, would
-commit an error which might be serious in more than one respect.
-
-When a young patient presents signs of consumption, there is cause
-to suspect that onanism is the cause of it; and modes may be used to
-ascertain whether this be the case. Sometimes, the patient is watched,
-as has already been stated. Sometimes, we attempt to discover if
-any other cause has produced consumption; and when this cause is not
-found, the existence of onanism is supposed. The patient, for instance,
-presents all the symptoms of exhaustion, and these increase. We inquire
-if this state may not result from a want of nourishment, or from
-improper food--from hard work--from long watching--from melancholy,
-&c.; if it may not be caused by a disease about which the patient is
-silent, or by one of those maladies which produce effects similar to
-those of masturbation. Now, if the gradual sinkings of the patient
-cannot be explained by any of these causes; if he is weak, pale, thin,
-&c.; if, notwithstanding abundant and nutritious diet, a moderate
-degree of labor, the absence of all chagrin, &c.; if he presents no
-sign of disease--or, rather, if the first symptoms of diseases which
-he would present are not manifested until after the appearance of
-those of consumption; farther, if these diseases are too slight to
-have caused this state; if they cannot explain the numerous and varied
-symptoms observed, and particularly the countenance, the character of
-which is so significant, that it alone often reveals onanism: then we
-may consider, if not as certain, at least as very probable, that the
-patient is a victim to this habit, and we must act accordingly.
-
-But, of all the proofs, it is most important to obtain an avowal of
-the habit from the patient. First, it removes all doubt; then it
-renders the action of the physician more frank, and consequently more
-efficacious. He is no longer fearful of wounding his feelings--of
-compromising his character, by showing a wrongly founded suspicion;
-of awaking the attention of the young patient to a subject of which
-he was ignorant, or of teaching it to him. Advice, remonstrances,
-punishments, and all the moral remedies, are now easily applicable; and
-if therapeutic or coercive measures are called for, the patient can no
-longer deny their utility, and reject their use. Finally, an avowal
-places the physician, parents, instructors--in short, all who have
-authority over the patient--in a position to proceed directly to their
-aim, and thereby attain it.
-
-An avowal never takes place spontaneously: to obtain it is difficult.
-With males, one need not be so particular; but we must be careful with
-females. On this topic, no positive advice can be given: much must
-be left to the _tact_ of the practitioner. We will only add, that we
-have more than once simply given advice; and we could see, from the
-manner in which it was received, that our conjectures were right. The
-physician, however, should always attempt to acquire the confidence
-of the onanist, to place him at his ease. They have no frankness when
-a person is stern, or when a moral lecture is expected. The physician
-should confine himself to his profession. In his eye, onanism should
-be regarded as a cause of disease--as a cause similar to an excess
-of labor, bad regimen--in fact, like any influence which might prove
-injurious to the health. If he should moralize, he would probably be
-debarred from that confidence which would enable him to give advice,
-and prescribe the resources of the art.
-
-Masturbation is often overlooked, because it is thought that the hand
-is a necessary agent in producing it: this is far from being the
-case; as it may be indulged in, by both sexes, without the aid of the
-hands. When this is suspected, it is soon discovered, by the manners,
-face, and silence of the onanist: there is something unusual in the
-appearance of the patient, which is readily observed; and generally,
-also, the thighs are crossed, or, at least, are pressed closely
-together.
-
-To prevent the development of the habit, and, when it is developed,
-to arrest it, are the two indications prescribed by hygeia. These two
-indications may be embraced in one--that of _preventing_ the occurrence
-of onanism. If, for instance, you have before you the case of two
-individuals, one of whom is not addicted to onanism, while the other
-may be, you should _prevent_ one from continuing, and the other from
-commencing it. In the two cases, the means used have the same tendency;
-only when you wish to prevent the habit commenced, you have need of
-more efforts than in the first case, where it does not exist. These
-means are, then, preventive--essentially preventive; for, whatever may
-be their mode of action, they all tend to prevent the act. Although
-the prevention of onanism, and the arrest of the habit, are apparently
-different, yet we shall state the mode of attaining this double result,
-to avoid repetitions.
-
-In masturbation, we must consider three things--the desire, the will,
-and the power. Onanism is not possible, where these three conditions
-do not exist: there is no wish without desire; and the latter is often
-completely mastered by the former, and both present no result, if there
-be no possibility of indulging. Hence, to prevent masturbation, and to
-arrest it, the desire, the wish, the power to indulge, must not exist.
-These are, as it has been seen, three distinct indications. It is
-sufficient to attain one of them. It is easily seen, that by appeasing
-the desire, the will is aided; and the obstacles opposed would be more
-efficacious, the less vivid the desire, and the weaker the will. It is,
-therefore, sufficiently understood, that the three indications we have
-mentioned, although very distinct, require each of them special means,
-the attainment of one of which renders that of the others useless,
-while they all can and may be pursued conjointly.
-
-
-§ 1. FIRST INDICATION. TO PREVENT THE OCCURRENCE OF THE DESIRE TO
-MASTURBATE, TO PREVENT ITS RETURN, AND TO ABRIDGE ITS POWER.
-
-The desire of masturbation is very distinct from venereal desires,
-which may be felt without experiencing the other. This desire is
-special: it is that of onanism, and no other. The influences, also--the
-result of which is more or less proximate, and which is to excite the
-genital sense--are only the _indirect_ and _predisposing_ causes of
-onanism. The direct and efficient causes are those which lead to the
-indulgence of it, and the preferring of it to coition. Consequently,
-two indications relate to the desire of masturbation: one consists in
-preventing the exaltation of the venereal sense, or in appeasing it;
-and the second, in preventing or destroying the special causes of
-the desire of onanism. We proceed to study these two indications in
-succession.
-
-1. _Rules relative to the general or indirect causes of onanism._--The
-genital sense, and, consequently, the venereal desires, may be felt too
-vividly and too early, in consequence of different circumstances, which
-may be divided into two groups. Some belong to the human body, and
-consist in certain innate acquired arrangements of the organization,
-in consequence of which the venereal sense presents more or less
-susceptibility. Others consist in different influences, as education,
-food, climate, kind of life, &c.; which may act on the sensibility in
-general, and particularly on that of the genital system. We will begin
-with the rules connected with the former.
-
-_Of the innate or acquired causes of venereal excitement, and of the
-rules of preservation connected with them._--Some individuals seem, as
-it were, marked by their organization, to become victims of venereal
-excesses. In them, the genital sense is excited, and exercises great
-power, long before the usual period of its manifestation. In others,
-on the contrary, this sense is not excited until late: in fact, it is
-so slight, that even this excitement may be doubted. In the present
-state of the science, these differences can by no means be accounted
-for. In many cases, however the great development of certain organs,
-the increase of their vitality or their diseased state exercise
-considerable influence on the strength and precocity of the venereal
-sense.
-
-Gall, and the phrenologists of his school, place amativeness in the
-cerebellum. They consider this organ as the legislator of the sexual
-parts, the seat of physical love; and assert that the differences in
-the mass and vitality of this portion of the brain, correspond exactly
-to the differences of the intensity of the genital desires. We will
-proceed to mention the different facts on which these physiologists
-formed their opinion.
-
-Comparative anatomy furnishes them with no argument worthy of mention:
-in fine, facts contradictory to Gall’s opinion may be derived from
-numerous classes of animals who have been deprived of their cerebellum,
-and yet have exercised the act of reproduction. This opinion applies
-only to man, and the mammalia resembling him. The relation between
-the development of the cerebellum and that of the genital organs, has
-furnished a more plausible reason: it has been adduced as an argument,
-that, in the encephalon, the fibres of the cerebellum are the last to
-appear distinctly; and this organ is not perfect, till from the age of
-eighteen to twenty-six years. A remark of Sœmmering, also, has been
-adduced, to show that the cerebellum, at the period of puberty, is to
-the cerebrum as one to five, while in infancy it is only as one to
-seven.
-
-We have already seen that the genital sense is more powerful in males
-than in females. But it is said positively, that the cerebellum is
-commonly smaller in females than in males.
-
-Phrenologists have also sought to establish a reciprocity of action
-between the genital organs and the cerebellum, by means of the results
-of castration, and also the influence which the development of the
-cerebellum may have on the testicles. Castration, (say they,) while it
-opposes the development of the sense of venery, prevents the cerebellum
-from gaining the size it would otherwise have attained. Observe, too,
-how much broader the neck in the bull is, than in the ox. They have
-also advanced, that if castration occurs only at a period when the
-cerebellum acquires its development, the genital sense may survive this
-operation; that, in some cases, it may reduce this organ to a state
-approximating atrophy; that the removal of one testicle from an animal,
-whatever may be its species, may produce atrophy, or some alteration
-in the lobe of the cerebellum, on the side opposite to the testicle
-removed. They have added, that the alteration of the cerebellum had
-caused a wasting of the testicles; and that, in the cases where one
-of the lobes only was disorganized, the testicle of the opposite side
-was alone affected. According to Gall and his disciples, the size of
-the cerebellum is discerned externally by the size and breadth of
-the nucha. They remark, that this part of the skull is generally more
-convex in males than in females--in entire animals, than in those
-who have been castrated--in early life, and in those individuals who
-are distinguished for their salacity, more than in those who are not
-susceptible to the pleasures of love. Larrey pointed out to Gall a
-soldier, whose antipathy to females amounted to mania: the sight of a
-female caused in him violent convulsions, and almost fury. Spurzheim
-saw a similar instance in England. Now, in both of these individuals,
-the cerebellum was but slightly developed. The portraits of Newton,
-Charles XII., and Kant, according to Gall, by the narrowness of the
-neck, show that the organ of which we were speaking was but slightly
-developed in these great men, who history states had but little relish
-for venereal pleasures. Dispositions diametrically opposite, on the
-contrary, co-exist with an enlarged volume of the brain. The following
-is related by Gall:--
-
-“A highly intellectual lady was affected from infancy with very
-passionate desires; and her careful education alone saved her from
-those excesses to which she was exposed by her violent temperament.
-When arrived at a more advanced age, she was left to herself. She
-attempted every mode to satisfy her burning passions; but enjoyment
-seemed only to irritate her. She was frequently almost in a state of
-mania. In despair, she left her house, quitted the city, and took
-refuge with her mother, in a desolate country, where the want of
-exciting objects, and the utmost severity, and the cares of gardening,
-prevented the evil. After a time, she returned again to a large city,
-was again threatened with relapse, and took refuge a second time with
-her mother. On returning, she came to see me at Paris, and complained
-to me in great despair. ‘On every side, I see images of luxury--in
-every place--at table, and even in my sleep, the demon pursues me. I
-shall either be mad, or die.’
-
-“I told her briefly the natural history of the instinct of propagation.
-I called her attention to the form of her neck. Although her head was
-very large, yet the diameter of the nucha exceeded the distance from
-ear to ear. She formed an idea of the cause of her state. I advised her
-to visit her mother again; to vary her occupations, so as to diminish
-the activity of her cerebellum; to apply leeches to the nucha, to
-diminish the irritation of this organ; to avoid all stimulating meats
-and drinks, &c. &c.
-
-“I have seen at Paris,” says the same author, “a boy, five years old,
-who seemed sixteen, in respect to his corporeal strength. His genital
-organs were perfectly developed; his beard was strong; his voice was
-rough and hoarse: in short, he presented all the signs of virility.”
-
-Dr. Gall was struck, also, with the development of the cerebellum in a
-boy ten years old, who had been detained in a house of correction at
-Leipzick, for having violated a young girl. He had also seen at Paris
-a young mulatto, less than three years old, who was remarkable in the
-same respect. He made advances, not only to young girls, but to women,
-and urged them to consent to his desires. His sexual organs, with the
-exception of long-continued erections, exhibited nothing remarkable.
-As he was surrounded by girls who indulged him, he died of consumption
-before he was five years old. His cerebellum was unusually developed;
-the rest of the head was of the common size. Gall has related other
-instances of the kind.
-
-A case published by Dr. Chauffard, of Avignon, deserves to be stated
-here. This physician accompanied the prefect in 1823, in his tour to
-the departments, to examine those young men who wished to be discharged
-from military service. A stout farmer, with coarse beard and hair, and
-disagreeable odor, was undressed, being, as it was said, affected with
-a disease which he dared not name. It was at the close of December; the
-season was cold, and the room very chilly. No sooner was he undressed,
-than the penis began to swell. He was confused--he blushed--he turned
-his back to the assistants. He could not avoid the priapism; nor,
-finally, an emission of semen, which took place without a sensible
-diminution in the size of this organ. This man was ignorant and stupid,
-but he answered questions correctly. He said he was always tormented
-by continual erections, often followed by seminal emissions. He even
-admitted that he was accustomed to solicit them. His neck was short;
-broad, and thick; the posterior portion of the occipital bone presented
-a very marked slope: finally, the cerebellar portion of the cranium
-was very prominent, and much developed. This man was reformed. (_Jour.
-univ. des Sc. Med._, December, 1828.) We have also observed a very
-remarkable development of the posterior part of the skull, in a boy
-eight years old, who was addicted to masturbation for several years,
-and whose penis was almost constantly in a state of erection. This
-prominence so elongated the antero posterior diameter of the cranium,
-that the mother found it difficult to fit caps to his head.
-
-One of Gall’s most distinguished pupils, Dr. Voisin, has tested
-phrenology, in a visit recently made to the convict galley, at Toulon.
-Renaud, the Director, informed of the scientific purpose of the
-visit of this physician, allowed him to examine the cerebral organs
-of 350 thieves, forgers, or homicides; among whom he had designedly
-distributed 22 other convicts, condemned for rape, requesting M. Voisin
-to discover them from this number, by examining the posterior part of
-the head. This gentleman picked out 22, 13 of whom only were condemned
-for violence. Thus, then, he had selected nine who were not guilty of
-this crime; and, on the contrary, had allowed to escape him nine who
-had been committed. Now, the nine wrongly selected were libertines,
-whom the Director admitted required to be constantly watched; and
-the nine, on the contrary, whom he had not detected, were guilty
-by accident, or when intoxicated: with them, libertinism was only
-accidental, and not organic.
-
-A few experimental proofs have been invoked, in support of Gall’s
-opinions of the cerebellum. We will cite a remark made by Serres, as
-to those bulls killed by striking them on the back of the neck. “The
-penis, in those where the cerebellum was injured, oscillated very
-evidently during the experiment.” The same gentleman observed a very
-marked erection in a young horse, who was killed by plunging a knife
-into the cerebellum. Segalas has produced the same effect in Guinea
-pigs, by pushing a stylet into this organ.
-
-The principal proofs, however, have been drawn from the action of the
-diseased cerebellum on the genital apparatus. Thus, the erection of
-the penis in those who die by hanging, has been attributed, by Gall,
-to the affection of the cerebellum in this kind of death. Cruvelhier
-has contested this explanation. He thinks it may be explained by the
-stasis of the venous blood. “Respiration,” says he, “is retarded, in
-consequence of the medulla oblongata; and hence results a semi-asphyxic
-state, favorable to erection. In hanging, there may be an affection of
-the cervical part of the medulla; and priapism has been observed more
-than once in lesions of this part.” Phrenologists have also shown, that
-this symptom often follows the application of a blister or seton to the
-neck. Another fact, to show the connection of the cerebellum with the
-genital apparatus, is that of a soldier, whose generative powers had
-disappeared, after the fleshy scalp of the occiput had been removed
-by the blow of a sabre. We doubt whether similar cases to this, which
-was observed by Larry, have often occurred; although Dr. Bischoff has
-advanced, that wounds of the back of the head, and blows on this part,
-have often been followed by inflammation of the genitals.
-
-Peculiar excitement of these organs has more than once attended a
-disease of the cerebellum. We have already mentioned this fact; and
-the cases stated were selected as those where the affection of the
-cerebellum might be considered as produced by venereal excesses. In
-those now to be mentioned, the genital excitement is, or seems to be,
-the consequence of this affection.
-
-Erection of the penis, with or without pollutions, has several
-times been noticed as a symptom of apoplexy of the cerebellum. This
-phenomenon may have been observed in some cases of this affection
-which we have cited. Serres was the first one to call attention to
-this phenomenon, in his Memoir on Apoplexy of the Cerebellum, inserted
-in the Journal of Experimental Physiology; the principal facts of which
-have been adduced in his work on the comparative anatomy of the brain.
-One fact is, that of a man, forty-six years old, who died with violent
-apoplexy of the cerebellum, during which satyriasis and ejaculation
-appeared, with swelling of all the genital organs. Similar cases,
-which it is unnecessary to state here, might be added. One of them was
-observed by Falret. “The priapism was presented to my observation with
-a very remarkable circumstance. The patient had been affected with
-apoplexy, and presented a complete paralysis of the left side of the
-body. Different nervous symptoms indicated that there was also great
-irritation of the encephalon or its membranes. This man, although
-half frantic, made amorous proposals to the female who attended him,
-and presented a semi-erection of the penis: this part, instead of
-being straight, presented a concavity, which looked towards the side
-not paralyzed. I regret that I could not examine the cadaver of this
-individual. The affection of the genital organs, in apoplexies of the
-cerebellum, might probably have been noticed in many cases, if it had
-been sought after.” It has not been noted, in any of the cases analyzed
-by Andral. Cruvelhier, also, has never noticed priapism, in a case of
-apoplexy of the cerebellum which he has seen; but he adds, that he
-would not dare to say that it has never existed--at least, temporarily.
-In fact, it may easily escape observation.
-
-Hydrocephalic patients often show a great passion for venereal
-indulgences. Gall, in noticing this remark, observes, that of all
-the parts of the encephalon, this is the least changed in these
-individuals. Chauffard has seen a hydrocephalic patient, fourteen
-to fifteen years old, with an enormous head, who was addicted to
-masturbation, and spoke of the pleasures he derived from it.
-
-An acute or chronic irritation of the cerebellum, or of its envelopes,
-may cause venereal symptoms more than the alterations just mentioned.
-In a cadaver, brought from the hospital Bicetre to the amphitheatre,
-where the penis and testes were considerably swelled, the whole of the
-cerebellum was inflamed. One of the most interesting facts of this
-kind was reported by Chauffard. It was that of a man, fifty-three
-years old, of pleasant manners and mild character, who, in falling,
-struck his head against the bed-post. The inferior occipital region
-became inflamed; and subsequently, the habits of the patient were much
-changed: he became affected with satyriasis, and was so salacious,
-that he persecuted his wife and daughter, and all the females around
-him. This man, hitherto pious and modest, gradually became affected
-with the most violent erotic delirium, and finally committed the most
-indecent acts. During the next three months, this state increased;
-but, at the same time, his strength and intelligence failed. Finally,
-one day, after a violent fit of anger, occasioned by the refusal of
-his wife to listen to him, he became convulsed. The pain left the back
-part of the head, and affected the top of it. The left side of the
-body now began to be paralyzed; and the satyriasis was replaced by
-religious delirium, with constant mumbling of prayers. The patient died
-eight days afterward. According to Chauffard, at first, there was an
-affection of the cerebellum. When the state of the patient was changed,
-the organ of veneration was affected: this organ corresponds to the
-central posterior and superior part of the frontal bone, where the
-patient finally felt severe pain.
-
-Was not the cerebellum, also, affected, in the following case reported
-by Sainte Marie:--“A merchant of Lyons, an educated and honorable man,
-seemed to be cured of an inveterate venereal affection, for which
-he had undergone a course of treatment with mercury. He, however,
-complained of restlessness, heat in the throat, _pains in the occiput
-and nucha_, and frequent erections. In 1812, after domestic troubles,
-he became affected with furious delirium. This state lasted three days,
-and terminated in priapism; during which, the patient had fourteen
-emissions in a few hours. This singular crisis resulted in a perfect
-calm: extreme debility, however, remained, which soon yielded to
-tonics and analeptics. Two years and a half afterward, this disease
-reappeared, under the influence of these same causes, and with similar
-symptoms. The termination was the same. There was a slight return of
-it after two years; but, this time, the patient escaped with slight
-erections, without much loss of semen.”
-
-Facts of a similar character have induced several authors to attribute
-satyriasis and nymphomania exclusively to an innate or accidental
-state of the cerebellum. “The material condition of satyriasis,” says
-Voisin, “resides in the encephalon; and in all cases, the deranged
-manifestation of it depends on the nature and preponderating power of
-the cerebellum, or on those moral and intellectual causes which have
-favored the development of this organ--or, rather, on the external
-circumstances which at the moment of disease have brought it violently
-into action.” On the other hand, the localization of physical love in
-the cerebellum has been violently contested by excellent observers,
-particularly by Flourens and Bouillaud, who consider as the special
-function of this organ its presidence over locomotion. Bouillaud,
-particularly, has attempted to establish, by analyzing the observations
-of Gall and Serres, that they are not so conclusive as these authors
-asserted, and that they may be interpreted differently. Chauffard
-thinks that Gall has gone too far, and that his remark, that physical
-love and erections should not be attributed to the presence of the
-semen and the irritation which it causes, should be qualified by using
-the term _exclusively_. We also think, that, thus altered, Gall’s
-remark would be more just. The cerebellum has certainly a powerful
-action on salacity; but we shall see that each part of the genital
-apparatus exercises one equally great; and that, consequently, the
-organic principle of the state of rutting, and of venereal excesses,
-cannot be sought for solely in the encephalon.
-
-In consequence of Gall’s opinions, many authors, among whom we will
-mention Chauffard, Voisin, and Londe, have thought it necessary, in
-order to subdue too great a degree of amativeness, to make applications
-directly to the cerebellum. Some attempts have seemed to justify
-this view of the subject. Sainte Marie says, that a physician of
-Lyons has cured inveterate nocturnal pollutions, by applying ice to
-the occiput and nucha before going to bed. A man, thirty years old,
-had three or four seminal emissions every night, which Lallemand had
-tried in vain to cure, by cauterizing the ejaculatory canals. Gensoult
-applied leeches and ice to the nucha: the pollutions were arrested,
-as if by magic. Serres, who reports this case, adds, that, since the
-publication of his memoir on cerebellar apoplexy, he has seen two cases
-of apoplexy, where erections appeared during the paroxysms. Both were
-cured by applying leeches and emollient cataplasms to the nucha. Might
-not narcotics be applied, endermically, near the cerebellum, to subdue
-the onanistic satyriasis? Might not belladonna, opium, &c., introduced
-in this manner, be used with advantage? Might not, also, the hair of
-the head be kept short, especially behind, and rest on a pillow of
-hair, instead of feathers? Setons and blisters, also, should be applied
-to the neck, in onanists, only with the utmost care; and they should
-be removed as soon as they are considered indispensable. Besides the
-irritation caused near the cerebellum, the influence of the cantharides
-is to be guarded against.
-
-We have already stated, that there is a reciprocity of action between
-different organs: if there be one which exercises a marked influence
-on the other, the latter will in turn affect the former. This may be
-proved by the cerebellum, which sometimes becomes diseased after abuses
-of the genital organs, and sometimes communicates to these organs the
-over-excitement which is accidentally seated in it: the spinal marrow,
-also, confirms the fact.
-
-Willis, who, before Gall, had sought to localize in the nervous centres
-the faculty of reproduction, had designated the spinal marrow as the
-organ of this faculty. Numerous observations, and many experiments,
-have lately given some credit to this opinion. Segalas, who produced
-erections of the penis in Guinea pigs, by introducing a stylet into
-the cerebellum, caused ejaculations by pushing this instrument into
-the spinal column, near the lumbar region. Serres repeated this last
-experiment, and the result was similar: he therefore concluded that the
-lower part of the spinal marrow acts on the secretory and excreting
-seminal apparatus, as the cerebellum acts on the genital sense. We
-shall see, also, that this opinion is too positive, as the lesions of
-the medulla exert a marked action on erection of the penis and the
-venereal sense, besides the influence on the ejaculation attributed to
-it by Serres.
-
-A case, reported by Lenhossek, seems to establish, that compression and
-atrophy of the spinal marrow may oppose the development of the genital
-organs. This patient was twenty-four years old: he was thin, wasted,
-and his height was that of an individual twelve years of age. Neither
-his face nor genital system presented the characters of puberty. This
-individual died suddenly; and it was found, that in consequence of a
-malformation of the first and second cervical vertebræ, the diameter of
-the occipital foramen was contracted one half. The medulla oblongata
-had been compressed in this part, and its development was impeded.
-Might not the singular disease, observed by Larrey in Egypt, and
-afterward in Paris, be referred to an affection of the spinal marrow?
-Here the testicles gradually wasted; the patient lost the power of
-feeling venereal sensations, and also that of erections; the lower
-extremities shrunk away, and tottered; the face was discolored; the
-digestive powers and intellectual faculties were deranged. Does not
-this coincidence, of a considerable weakening of the lower extremities
-and the wasting of the testicles, indicate that this latter has been
-the consequence of an affection of the spinal marrow?
-
-Dupuytren long since established the fact, that priapism was caused
-by a lesion of this organ. Numerous instances of this are found in
-Olivier’s work on the spinal marrow: they prove, that every part of
-the medulla, but particularly the cervical portion, when injured, may
-cause an erection of the penis. Potain, Renauldin, and Hedelhofer, have
-stated similar facts. This last author saw a man who fell upon his
-sacrum, and instantly had an emission. Professor Fages was in the habit
-of mentioning the following case in his lectures:--“An aid-de-camp of
-General Dumourier was affected with complete paralysis of the lower
-extremities, in consequence of a fall from his horse. This paralysis
-was attended with a great degree of priapism, which encumbered him
-very much, and caused retentions of urine, which were treated by the
-most active refrigerants. Going through Montpelier, on his way to
-Balaruc, he rested several days at the military hospital, where it
-became expedient to sound him. In order to do this, it was necessary
-to uncover the whole body, to expose it for some time to the cold air,
-and to apply to it cold water; and, even then, the sound had to be used
-promptly, otherwise erections would soon have supervened, merely by
-touching the penis, and by the presence of the sound in the urethra.
-The baths of Balaruc almost cured the paralysis; and as motion returned
-to the lower extremities, the priapism disappeared.”
-
-Do not these facts show that the spinal marrow has a marked influence
-on the genital organs. We have already mentioned the opinion of Sainte
-Marie, who regards involuntary pollutions as sometimes the cause and
-sometimes the result of affections of the spinal marrow. May not an
-original or accidental state of this organ be, in some subjects,
-the indirect cause of venereal excesses? Remark the influence of a
-recumbent position, in producing voluptuous dreams and emissions of
-semen. Does not this singular effect depend on the heat of the spinal
-marrow caused by this position? This is possible, particularly if you
-consider the advantages derived in involuntary pollution, priapism,
-and satyriasis, from douches of cold water along the vertebral
-column, particularly on the lumbar and sacral regions, and also from
-the application of ice to these parts. Sainte Marie has sometimes
-arrested the spasm of the genital organs by frictions on the sacrum
-with bladders full of ice. We think, then, there are cases where these
-remedies may be used successfully to combat the habit of masturbation.
-Narcotic frictions and endermic applications may be made along the
-vertebral column, as we have said, when speaking of the cerebellum. In
-vigorous patients, leeches and cups may be applied to the loins. We
-will not allude here to the remedy recommended by many old authors, of
-a sheet of lead to the kidneys, for this cannot produce the refrigerant
-effect expected from it.
-
-The organic conditions of venereal desire are confined neither to the
-cerebellum nor spinal marrow: they may exist, also, in all parts of the
-genital system, as we shall demonstrate.
-
-A considerable part of this system is formed of a tissue termed the
-_erectile_, on account of its power of swelling, hardening, and
-becoming erected. It constitutes the whole of the cavernous bodies--the
-glans, which is the loose extremity of these bodies--the spongy part of
-the urethra--the clitoris--and a considerable portion of the vulva and
-vagina. The part taken by this tissue in the work of generation, would
-indicate that it is affected in amatory desires, and that its state
-must exercise some influence upon them; which is demonstrated by the
-facts we shall mention.
-
-There is no vice in the human species without its representative in
-some class of animals. Thus, the inclination to theft, to destroy,
-&c., are found in some species existing to a great degree. So, too,
-with luxuriousness. There is a class of apes--the dog-faced--which
-represent it. It is impossible to form an idea of the lasciviousness
-of these animals, which is manifested at sight not only of a female
-of their own class, but at that of a woman: they show by their looks,
-gesture, and voice, that they are excited. They are extremely jealous
-at sight of a man. They indulge in coition to great excess; and if
-this be impossible, they abuse themselves. How does their organization
-differ from that of other animals?--in the cerebellum?--in the spinal
-marrow? No: but according to Desmoulins, by the enormous mass of
-erectile tissue which they have. This tissue abounds not only around
-the sexual organs, but is found in the haunches and pubis. In the face,
-it is not confined as in us to the lips, but it covers the face, and
-there presents a brilliancy of color which exceeds that of the vulva
-and glans in our species. It should be remembered that the kunocephali
-do not exhibit this lasciviousness until puberty, when this tissue is
-developed, and assumes its brilliant colors.
-
-Here, then, are animals, in whom the erectile tissue evidently performs
-the part attributed by phrenologists exclusively to the cerebellum.
-Why may not the same thing exist in our species? Are not the penis
-and clitoris, generally speaking, much larger in those who have a
-marked propensity for the pleasures of love? Is not their erection the
-most constant sign of the activity of the venereal sense? Is not the
-erectile tissue developed at puberty, at the same time with this sense,
-and does it not collapse in old age? Finally, does not the genital
-sense exist at its highest degree in the glans--the clitoris--that is,
-in the organs formed entirely of this tissue?
-
-There is, then, reason to seek the principle of masturbation in this
-tissue, and to this remedies should be applied. This is done in a
-vigorous and healthy patient by blood-letting, and by applying leeches
-or cups around the sexual parts. Lotions and cold applications to these
-parts, and cold hip-baths, act in the same manner; and as they do
-not contribute to the exhaustion, they are employed more frequently.
-Sainte Marie recommends that the genital organs of individuals affected
-with spermatorrhœa should be covered with bladders of pounded ice,
-which should be removed as often as it melts. This remedy seems more
-efficacious and convenient than the application of wet sponges or
-linens to the parts. It might also be used in those onanists who will
-consent to it. The same indication is fulfilled by forbidding children
-to be washed in warm water, and by causing them to use hard cushions
-to sit on; and likewise, by keeping the pelvis lightly covered, and the
-clothes large enough to allow the air to circulate freely around the
-genital organs. The cold injections, in girls, may also be somewhat
-useful. There is also another remedy which is applicable to parts
-formed of erectile tissue, and which we shall mention--viz., their
-removal.
-
-Some nations are accustomed to practise upon their female children
-a kind of circumcision, which consists in cutting off several parts
-of the vulva. This custom is very ancient, and exists particularly
-in Egypt, Ethiopia, around the Persian Gulf, and in several parts of
-central Africa. What portions of the vulva are cut off? Many authors
-think that these are the nympbæ, clitoris, and even the hymen. In fact,
-Niebuhr has given a colored plate of the sexual organs of an Egyptian
-girl, eighteen years old, drawn by the painter Baurenfiend, the
-original of which is in the library at Gottingen, in which the parts
-just named seem to have been extirpated. Sonnini, who has examined two
-young Egyptian girls, one of whom had been circumcised for two years,
-while the operation was performed on the other in his presence, states,
-contrary to Niebuhr’s opinion, that this operation has reference to
-the interior of the vulva, and is confined to the excision of a thick,
-flabby, and fleshy excrescence, covered with skin, which in several
-African races rises above the commissure of the external labia; the
-length of this was only six lines, in the two girls observed by him,
-but it may be four inches long, at the age of twenty-five years. As the
-opinion of Niebuhr agrees with that of all authors who have lived in
-these countries, the facts observed by Sonnini are exceptions, rather
-than the rule. Hence, it appears, that in many nations it is the custom
-to remove from the females a considerable portion of the erectile
-tissue, which is found around their sexual organs.
-
-What is the origin of this singular custom? Is it to remove in infancy,
-from the vulva of the girls, certain prominences which, at a later
-period, might prove inconvenient? Has this custom been established
-with a view to cleanliness? May it not be, to take away the power of
-self-abuse? Whatever may be the reason of its existence, its effect is
-to deaden the venereal sense, by removing a portion of the surfaces
-in which it is situated. This seems positively established, by the
-testimony of Niebuhr, and many others.
-
-If this be so, may not the removal of the internal labia and of the
-preputial portion of the clitoris--especially if these parts are
-large--be attempted, in order to avoid a more extreme thing, which
-we shall mention directly. Might not this removal blunt, if it did
-not deaden, the propensity to solitary enjoyments, and render the
-other remedies employed more efficient? Although we have but little
-confidence in this operation, yet, when we consider that a superficial
-cauterization of the nymphæ and clitoris has cured nymphomania, as
-will be stated hereafter, we can conceive that the excision of the
-internal labia may in some ca«es present a chance of success. Farther:
-this operation is not very painful--is easily performed--and cannot,
-even under the least favorable circumstances, be attended with any
-inconvenience, except that of being useless. It certainly would not be
-practised generally if it caused severe pains, or was followed by bad
-consequences. In Africa, it is performed by the females of Said, who
-use a razor. And it should be remembered, too, that it is not children
-who submit to this operation; but girls eight or ten years old, as may
-be seen in the travels of Niebuhr and Sonnini.
-
-The exquisite sensibility of the clitoris, and the size it commonly
-presents in lascivious females--that which it acquires in those who
-masturbate, or who are affected with nymphomania--have led to the
-opinion, that voluptuous desires are situated exclusively in this
-organ, and that its removal will extinguish them. Levret was, we
-believe, the first who conceived the idea of curing nymphomania by this
-operation. Dubois performed it on a young girl, who was so addicted
-to onanism, that she was almost in the last stages of marasmus. Aware
-of the danger of her situation, and yet too weak, or too much under
-the control of voluptuousness, she could not resist. In vain were her
-hands and limbs tied: she rubbed herself against the bed, and thus
-procured excessive discharges. Her parents applied to Dubois, who
-proposed amputation of the clitoris. This was assented to. The organ
-was removed by one stroke of the knife: the hemorrhage was arrested by
-the actual cautery, and the girl recovered her health and strength.
-Richerand, who has reported this case, considers the operation
-performed on this young girl as the most efficient remedy in such a
-case. If the idea of cauterizing the vessels is disagreeable to the
-patients, the vessels of the clitoris might be tied, as are those of
-the penis after amputation. (_Nosog. Chirurg._, second edition, 1808;
-vol. iv., p. 326.)
-
-The following, which is similar to the preceding, but more remarkable
-in some respects, was published in the Journal of Surgery, by Graefe:--
-
-“The subject of this case was born in 1807, and grew very well, till
-the age of fourteen months, when she became ill: for eight days, she
-was affected alternately with constipation, diarrhœa, and vomiting. She
-remained sick till she was two years old, and did not walk till she was
-four. She, however, never learned to talk, and exhibited symptoms of
-idiocy. This idiocy resisted the most varied treatment, progressively
-increased, and the patient was finally reduced to a state below the
-brute. She swallowed her feces, and passed hour after hour in a corner,
-her tongue lolling from her mouth.
-
-“The most experienced physicians considered her case as hopeless. A
-physician at Berlin undertook to cure her. She was now fourteen years
-old. He remarked first in her a strong inclination to onanism: she
-indulged in this practice night and day. In this, there was a curative
-indication, which the physician embraced immediately. It seemed evident
-to him that masturbation prevented the development of the intellectual
-faculties. Hence, she was prevented from sitting down; and the head
-was cauterized, to obtain revulsion by the pain. The wound from this
-operation did not suppurate till after six weeks. Cold effusions were
-applied to the wound, and a solution of antimony was injected into it.
-These remedies were followed by a slight degree of amendment. Douches
-and emetics were then used, but in vain. Finally, when the patient was
-fifteen years old, her physician resolved to extirpate the clitoris.
-The operation was performed June 20, 1822, by Professor Graefe, of
-Berlin. The wound soon cicatrized; and the good effects of the process
-exceeded all expectations. The disposition to onanism was removed; the
-mind became expanded; and the education of the patient commenced. In
-three years, she could talk, read, write, and even play a few tunes
-on the piano--to be sure, rather imperfectly; but still she might be
-regarded as being in the way of recovering from her long and cruel
-disease.”
-
-The details of this case are not sufficient to establish whether
-idiocy was the cause or effect of onanism. We may conclude, however,
-from the result, that it was at least in great part the consequence of
-this habit. It, however, was necessary to put a stop to the onanism
-before the idiocy disappeared. Farther, this case shows the extent
-of the restorative power of nature, when it is no longer impeded by
-masturbation. It also shows, by the good effects arising from removing
-the clitoris, that it would be wrong to think, as several authors, and
-particularly Voisin, have asserted, that nymphomania always depended
-on an affection of the cerebellum. Powerful and the most energetic
-revulsives had been applied to this latter organ, but unsuccessfully.
-It was not the first time the remedies had been used. Villeneuve long
-since recommended the application of caustics to the legs, and of cups
-around the genital organs, with extensive scarifications, to appease
-venereal desires.
-
-The two following facts were communicated by Biett. The first is that
-of a lady, thirty-five years old, who became affected with nymphomania,
-after long absence from her husband. After many unsuccessful efforts
-to cure this disease, extirpation of the clitoris was decided upon.
-The operation was not easy, and there was considerable hemorrhage,
-requiring the application of ligatures. In a few weeks, the patient
-recovered.
-
-The success of this operation induced Biett to advise a similar one in
-the following case:--
-
-“Mademoiselle C***, ten years old, of strong constitution and good
-muscular developments, had been addicted to onanism since she was two
-years old. She was taught it by her nurse, who remarked that she was
-quieted, when crying, by titillating the clitoris, in which she was
-soon imitated by the patient. The habit finally caused great moral
-and physical degeneration. At first, the cause of her wasting away
-was unknown; but when it was discovered, the parents tried every mode
-to break her of it. Their vigilance was in vain--she still continued
-it. Her mind remained unaffected, but not so with her physical
-constitution. Mechanical means were now employed: the apparatus of
-Lafont was applied, but without success; and there was danger of her
-becoming idiotic. Her parents, after long hesitation, decided to have
-the clitoris removed. The operation was performed June 26, 1831, with
-perfect success. The patient became restored, and her voluptuous
-feelings disappeared.”
-
-Many have scruples in regard to this operation. They ask whether
-it is right to nip the enjoyments of love in the bud, &c. These
-considerations seem to me only to impose circumspection in respect to
-the operation, and to show that the operation never should be employed
-until all other remedies have been tried. But when life is to be saved,
-or the mind is to be preserved, then we ought not to hesitate. We then
-do, as in amputating a limb--we sacrifice a part for the whole. Nor is
-it demonstrated, that the venereal sense is for ever extinguished, by
-removing the clitoris. This organ is not the exclusive seat of venereal
-sensations, as we have already seen, and shall see again. Hence, it may
-be feared, for this reason, that the operation may not be successful.
-In fact, only the prominent part of the clitoris is cut off: a large
-portion of the cavernous bodies remains. If the operation is performed
-before puberty, perhaps by developing their tissue, this feeling may
-extend at this period of life: but, even then, if these chances of
-reparation did not exist--if it were certain to destroy all sexual
-desires--still this operation ought to be performed; as, without these
-feelings of love, a female may become a good mother, and a devoted wife.
-
-Our remarks on the cerebellum, spinal marrow, and erectile tissue,
-may apply to all parts of the genital apparatus; as each part may be
-a direct cause of venereal excitement, and consequently an indirect
-cause of venereal excesses. This is certainly true of the mucous
-membrane, which lines the genito-urinary passages. Every one knows
-that acute inflammation of the interior of the urethra often causes
-painful erections, and which may attend a deformity of the penis; and
-hence the term _chordee_ is applied to these blenorrhœas. We have seen,
-when speaking of diurnal pollution, that chronic inflammations of this
-canal may be followed by losses of semen. The presence of a stone in
-the bladder usually causes an itching and tickling at the end of the
-penis, which has sometimes been the beginning of bad habits. If, after
-excesses of the table, coition is indulged in to excess, it is because
-the abuse of wine and liquors stimulates the mucous membranes, and
-particularly those of which we are speaking--excites their action,
-and new desires arise. Is it not on the special character possessed
-by cantharides, of inflaming the urinary passages, that the violent
-satyriasis caused by this remedy depends?
-
-The phenomena we have mentioned are seen much more frequently in
-females than in males, as the mucous membrane of the genital organs is
-much more extensive and more exposed to the action of external agents
-in the former. We have known several cases of nymphomania to be caused
-by herpetic affections, which were seated within the vulva. Biett knew
-a case of it in a female, sixty years old, affected with prurigo of
-this part. Trousseau has known similar cases. Hence, the irritations
-of the vulva, attended with itching, have been considered by many
-authors among the causes of onanism. Eczema, when it has extended to
-the vulvo-vaginal mucous membrane, has been known to induce this habit
-violently in females. Ascarides, which have escaped from the anus, have
-often caused violent itching, and afterward a venereal excitement,
-which was followed by the same result. Beck has known these worms to
-produce nymphomania in a female seventy years old. Bitter injections
-into the vagina were followed by the evacuation of a great number of
-these animals, and by the cessation of the symptoms.
-
-The remarks of many authors on the salacity of individuals afflicted
-with herpetic eruptions must apply particularly to those who are
-afflicted with pruriginous diseases of the skin around or near the
-genital organs. The excitement then extends to these organs, and awakes
-in them the sense of venery; a similar result may attend irritation of
-the inner surface of the rectum. Wichmann thinks, and a case published
-by St. Marie confirms the opinion, that simply the presence of
-ascarides in this instance may cause discharges of semen. Hemorrhoidal
-irritation has sometimes produced them. Thus Wichmann relates the case
-of an individual, in whom hemorrhoids caused an obstinate diarrhœa
-during the day, and frequent pollutions at night. Nymphomania has been
-produced by drastic enemata, and particularly by those made of gratiola.
-
-It is not uncommon to see symptoms of inflammation appear at the same
-time or successively in different mucous membranes. The membrane lining
-the genital organs is not more exempt from this, than others. The heat
-which patients feel in the genital parts, the redness and swelling
-which are there developed, are generally the only symptoms which then
-become known to the physician. But there is another, the excitement
-of the venereal sense, which often escapes him; either because the
-patients are too young to explain it, or because a natural feeling
-prompts them to conceal it. Hence this symptom is frequently unnoticed,
-except in rare cases, where it exists to a great degree, and presents
-characters analogous to those of satyriasis and nymphomania. Dr.
-Desportes was we believe the first one to point out a certain relation
-between venereal excitement and different catarrhal affections among
-which he has particularly mentioned the aphthous inflammation of the
-pharynx termed by Guersent _angina pultacea_. M. Desportes has known
-attacks of at least eight cases of this angina to be preceded by a
-vivid excitement of the reproductive system, an excitement which is
-sometimes manifested by an irritation, which although not exactly
-the venereal appetite, is analogous to it, and causes in the patient
-an evident feeling of distrust, inquietude, and chagrin. As this
-phenomenon has presented itself as a precursory symptom in at least one
-half of the cases of angina pultacea observed by him, he regards it
-as an index of the imminent invasion of this disease. He also thinks
-and with reason, that this phenomenon may, in young patients, become a
-cause of masturbation, and even in some cases, may pervert momentarily
-the ideas and sentiments, so as to impel individuals to the commission
-of acts reputed criminal or culpable. This opinion of Desportes is
-supported by eight facts. The most remarkable is that of a lady seventy
-years old, in whom the angina pultacea, was preceded for about a month
-with vivid and frequent venereal desires: they became so irresistible,
-that notwithstanding her religious opinions, she forgot herself so far
-as to relieve her ardor by onanism.
-
-Desportes has attempted to explain this singular feeling, by the
-connexion of the nerves of the neck with certain parts of the
-encephalon, the commencement of the spinal marrow. He might, we think,
-have explained this more naturally, by observing that the genital
-excitement, instead of appearing simultaneously with the affection of
-the pharynx, disappeared simply from the appearance of the latter.
-Thus, in one of these patients, a man of fifty years old, whose habits
-were chaste, and who was suddenly affected with unusual venereal
-desires and priapism, these symptoms ceased, when after twenty days,
-an angina appeared; which was followed by an eczema which affected
-the hairy scalp, and the parts behind the ears. In another of the
-cases reported by Desportes, the genital excitement which appeared
-during convalescence from pleuro pneumonia, was suddenly replaced by
-an inflammatory irritation of the digestive passages, and particularly
-of the inner membrane of the mouth. Is it not evident that the
-irritation was transmitted in these cases from one membrane to another.
-If, however, Desportes has erred in the manner in which the genital
-excitement is produced, he deserves credit for pointing out a symptom
-which merits the attention of practitioners.
-
-The irritation of the internal integuments of the genital parts, is not
-only, as this physician has thought, a precursory sign of that of the
-pharynx. It may show itself during the continuance of an inflammation
-of any other portion of the mucous membranes, or it may even follow
-this inflammation. Dr. Mirambeau has communicated to me two cases which
-confirm this fact. The first is that of a boy who was affected after a
-chill, with a very obstinate gastroenteritis. This disease was nearly
-terminated, when the mucous surface of the penis became the seat of a
-very severe irritation, which was soon attended with satyriasis. Things
-came to such a pass that his hands were obliged to be tied to keep him
-from those manipulations which he had never indulged in before. The
-subject of the second case was a girl nine years old, who presented the
-same circumstances as in the preceding case. She also was obliged to be
-tied. This fit continued in these two cases, from ten to twelve days.
-
-Hence irritation of the mucous membrane which lines the genito urinary
-passages may alone cause venereal excitement, and consequently onanism,
-independent of any affection of the nervous centres. This fact is
-highly essential on account of the important indications which may
-be deduced from it. Aware of the possibility of its existence, the
-physician will be more attentive to discover this irritation; he will
-find it more frequently and may in a degree prevent a fatal habit: he
-will also carefully remove every cause of irritation from the mucous
-integument of the genital parts and discuss as promptly as possible
-the inflammations which may be developed there. The mode of doing
-this is by attending to the following rules. To keep the sexual parts
-perfectly clean by repeated ablutions: to forbid all excesses of the
-table, and the use of such food and drinks as tend to render the urine
-more irritating, and the genito urinary mucous surface more irritable;
-hence to discard the use of wine, liquors, coffee, tea, spices,
-beer, particularly that made strong with hops: to allay irritations
-of the interior of the rectum, around the anus or those affecting
-the integuments around the genital organs. When children complain of
-itching around the anus, you must ascertain whether this be not caused
-by ascarides which is easily done by inspecting the parts and the
-feces: no means should be spared to get rid of these worms when they
-exist:[1] and finally the most efficient remedies should be used to
-cure the itching of the genitals as soon as this affection commences.
-Ozanam communicated to the academy of medicine August 12, 1828, a
-very acute case of nymphomania which had resisted antispasmodics,
-narcotics, cold baths, &c.; and which was finally cured by applying to
-the internal labia and clitoris a solution of four grains of nitrate
-of silver in an ounce of water. There was a marked inflammation of
-the parts to which this was applied. (_Rev. Med._, _Sept. 1828._) In
-1833, we employed successfully another remedy, for a lady thirty-four
-years old and subject to nervous affections. She experienced a
-feeling of heat and irritation in the vulva and vagina which caused
-her excessive trouble. Solutions and injections of an infusion of
-the wild cherry-tree, produced no relief. The introduction into the
-vagina of a pledget of lint moistened with a solution of the extract of
-belladonna, (one grain to the ounce,) had a better effect. Different
-symptoms indicated the absorption of this drug into the system and the
-irritation disappeared. But it returned a few days after, and we then
-advised the application of ice within the vagina which relieved her,
-and finally brought about a permanent cure.
-
-The irritation of the uterus in this lady might have had more or
-less influence in producing these distressing symptoms. Venereal
-desires, and nymphomania may in fact also depend upon the state of
-this organ. The excitement preceding and attending the period of
-menstruation, renders females much more lascivious. This phenomenon
-is much more marked in the small number of animals who menstruate: it
-always coexists in them with the period of rutting. This remarkable
-fact, which has long been known, of asses and monkeys, has lately
-been ascertained to exist in the roussettes by Carnot and Lesson, and
-in the genette by Cuvier. Farther inflammations and diseases of the
-uterus have often been observed in those affected with nymphomania.
-Helwiel relates the history of a lady, who, after being for a long time
-indifferent to conjugal pleasures, became extremely salacious. She died
-some time afterward, and on opening the dead body, fibrous tumours were
-found in the tissue of the uterus, and hydaleds in the ovaries. Calmeil
-found in a monomaniac, who was most furiously addicted to onanism, and
-who had a perfect hymen, that the os tincæ and a part of the neck of
-the uterus were of a violet colour, and were softened and ulcerated.
-This author observes that generally, when deranged females imagine
-themselves pregnant, or that they have been violated, are finally known
-to think of their genital organs, there is commonly some lesion of the
-uterus. (_Dict. des Sc. Med._, _art. Alienes_.) In the cases which
-have been mentioned, the affection of the uterus was not so much the
-cause as the result of the excesses which had been committed, but this
-cannot be said of those cases where Lisfranc has seen cauterization
-of the neck of the uterus to be followed in the genital organs with a
-kind of erethism which is attended with void desires. Is not this an
-experimental proof, that an irritation of the uterus may produce an
-exaltation of the venereal sense.
-
-This excitement from congenital or accidental dispositions, may
-affect the ovaries; to prove this we have only to consider that
-their development exactly follows that of the venereal sense: that
-at forty-five years they begin to diminish in size, and finally they
-disappear: their removal or destruction too is always attended with the
-extinction of venereal desires. The respective size of the veins and
-arteries of the ovaries has been mentioned by some authors as a cause
-of salacity: the amorous ardor of animals, say they, is much greater,
-when the veins of the ovaries are smaller and fewer than the arteries.
-Haller found that the last-named vessels were very much developed in a
-female whose temperament was extremely amorous. Different alterations
-in the ovaries have been found in those affected with nymphomania.
-Bosset, Blancard, Vesalius, Riolan, Mangel, Dimmerbroede, Riviere,
-Lieutaud &c. have observed cases of this. De Blegnay states that one
-of the girls confined at the Salpetrière, and who had been affected
-several times with furor uterinus, was once seized so violently
-that it was necessary to tie her. This unfortunate girl perished by
-suffocation, while struggling to extricate herself. On opening the dead
-body the left ovary and Fallopian tube were found much diseased.
-
-The removal of the ovaries has been performed successfully to appease
-excessive uterine ardor; a swineherd, irritated by the conduct of his
-daughter, extirpated these organs and thus extinguished her passions.
-The ovaries however have been extirpated several times on account of
-disease. The operation has been performed on several women and with
-success by Dr. Sacchi of Italy, and Dr. D. L. Rogers of New York. The
-usual effects in those who are fortunate enough to survive, are a
-wasting of the mammæ and a perfect indifference to the act of venery
-(_Bulletin therapeutique_, vol. iv., p. 313.)
-
-We need not make many remarks on the effects of castration in the male
-to show the influence of the testes on the development and vivacity
-of lascivious desires. We know that it has been asserted that these
-desires may remain after the loss of these organs. In support of this
-opinion have been quoted Galen, Juvenal, Brantome and many other
-authors, particularly Franck, who states that four eunuchs in a city
-had so many intrigues with females, that the police were obliged to
-interfere. (_Dict. des Sc. Med._, vol. iv. p. 269.) But these facts
-only prove that eunuchs may indulge in pretended coition and that they
-preserve some sparks of the fire which is generally seated in the
-testicles. Most authors have attributed the action of these organs
-in the sense of venery, to the fluid secreted by them, to the semen.
-They say that this fluid awakes this sense either by the qualities it
-assumes, when accumulating in the testicles or seminal vesicles, or
-because it is carried by absorption to all parts of the body. This
-opinion is certainly much too positive: but in the present state of
-science, can we, as do many authors, assert that it has no foundation?
-The qualities of the semen may certainly vary much, as may be proved by
-the presence or absence of the spermatic animalculæ. It is entertained
-for instance, that these animalculæ do not appear before puberty, and
-that they are not to be found in old age, that they disappear during
-sickness, and that in many animals, in most birds for instance, they
-occur only during the season of mating (_Dumas_, _Dict. class. d’hist.
-nat._, _art. generation_.) The venereal sense becomes imperious, when
-the individual secretes real semen, and this sense may be felt in
-old men, after semen is no longer formed. The fulness of the seminal
-vesicles cannot be absolutely necessary for venereal desires, because
-these organs do not exist in birds, in many cold-blooded animals and
-in some of the mammalia. Are these persons in whom the testicles,
-instead of descending into the bursæ as usual about the seventh mouth
-of fetal life, remain in the abdomen, are these persons, who are termed
-cryptorchides more addicted than others to sensual pleasures? This has
-been asserted by many authors, and particularly by Monro and Hunter.
-They certainly are not less so. Poliniere has related a case of a
-person of this character 17 years old whom he saw at Brest in 1812, and
-who indulged most immoderately in venereal pleasures contrary to the
-advice of his physicians. Death soon put an end to his career.
-
-The sensuality attributed to the cryptorchides has been explained
-by the greater degree of heat experienced in the testicles, when
-they remain in the abdomen. Be this as it may, the excitement of
-these organs probably exalts the sense of venery. When the state of
-excitement is very marked, they swell and become more sensible: these
-symptoms however are much more marked in animals during the period of
-rutting, than in our species. Accidental irritations of the testicles
-have sometimes also caused an unusual excitement of the sense of
-venery. Moreau attended for a long time a man advanced in age, who
-consulted him particularly for pollutions attended with amatory dreams.
-These symptoms which were very distressing constantly occurred,
-whenever the fibrous membrane of the testicles was affected with
-chronic rheumatism.
-
-From our remarks, we can conceive that extirpation of the testicles
-would be a powerful remedy, in fact the most efficient of all remedies,
-to quell lascivious desires, and to put an end to venereal excesses.
-Hence individuals have been known to sacrifice these organs, and thus
-to rid them«elves of a salacity which rendered them unhappy. Baldassar
-relates the history of a man on whom he tried every remedy, and
-finally found nothing better than fasting and prayers. “Not recovering
-under these remedies,” says this author, “he wished the operation of
-castration to be performed, but I thought it inexpedient. The patient
-however pressed me very earnestly, and sought to win over to his
-views by presents those who opposed his wishes. He even promised me an
-ambling poney of remarkable beauty, if I would consent to perform it.”
-Reduced to despair some individuals have even castrated themselves.
-Origen, it is well known, mutilated himself, in order to extinguish
-the warmth of his temperament. This operation has been performed by
-surgeons and with happy results. A surgeon of Bernstadt was less
-fortunate: he removed the testes of a man 73 years old, in consequence
-of the unusual desires he experienced. The operation was not attended
-with the expected result. (Sprengel, _Hist. de la med._, _vol. ix_.)
-Hence this remedy is not infallible. We will add that it is far from
-being without danger, particularly in those individuals who are already
-exhausted by excesses. Farther, the operation is not confined, as in
-amputation of the clitoris, to the extinction of the venereal sense: it
-takes away the procreating power, and causes that moral and physical
-deterioration which is seen in eunuchs, even when they have lost their
-testicles after puberty. These therefore are reasons why this operation
-should not be performed; an operation which is disapproved of by most
-authors. We will except however Simon, who advises as a last resource
-in those affected with onanism to press upon or tie the vas deferens
-or the spermatic artery; for it is better, said he, that the patient
-should live a eunuch, than that he should inevitably perish. (_Hygiene
-de la jeunesse_, p. 174.) Some practical conclusions may be drawn
-from the facts we have mentioned. Thus in some patients, cold lotions
-or applications of ice to the scrotum, and of leeches around it, may
-be used with advantage. Young patients also should have these parts
-clothed lightly.
-
-Diseases affecting various parts by their action on the organs
-mentioned, that is on the cerebellum, spinal marrow and the genital
-system, may cause a kind of a state of rutting and thus become the
-occasion of venereal excesses. For instance an unusual venereal
-excitement is sometimes a forerunner of an attack of gout, which may
-be explained by considering that the invasion of the local symptoms of
-this disease, is usually preceded by the irritation of several mucous
-membranes. Does not the salacity which all authors have mentioned
-as being peculiar to phthisical persons depend on the part which
-the genito-urinary membrane takes in the general excitement of the
-mucous membranes which is so common in the tuberculous affection of
-the lungs? Pathological anatomy has thrown no light on the subject.
-Of forty patients affected with phthisis, where the prostate gland,
-seminal vesicles, and vasa deferentia were carefully examined by Louis,
-three only presented an alteration of these parts; this consisted in
-the deposition of a quantity of tuberculous matter in the prostate
-gland: in one of them this matter was found in the seminal vesicles
-and vasa deferentia. (_Recherches anatopath. sur la phthisie_, 1825,
-p. 132.) Louis says nothing in regard to the amatory passions of these
-individuals.
-
-The affection of the genito-urinary mucous membrane, accounts also
-for the venereal sensations which many authors have mentioned as a
-symptom of the elephantiasis of the Greeks, otherwise termed lepra
-tubercularis. The frequency of this symptom was so remarkable, that
-the ancients confounded elephantiasis with satyriasis. Sonnini saw at
-Cana, in the island of Candia, a great many individuals of both sexes,
-affected with this kind of leprosy. They were confined according to
-custom, in barracks without the walls of the city, and there they
-indulged in the most unbridled licentiousness. Even the old men were
-very lascivious. He gives an instance of a leper who, on the night of
-his death, indulged his desires. Niebuhr speaks of another leper who
-carried away by his ardor, imparted his disease to a woman of Bagdad,
-who was admitted with him into the lazaretto of that city. Vidal
-and Joannis assert that they have seen this _libido_ in those Greek
-sailors affected with elephantiasis. After these proofs, it required
-some boldness to deny the possibility of this symptom, which to us
-seems easily explained. Consider the nature of elephantiasis: while
-it affects the skin, it extends to the mucous membranes, where we
-find tubercles, ulcerations, softenings, &c. Why should the membrane,
-lining the genito-urinary passages, be exempt from these alterations?
-Is it not then probable that this membrane was diseased in some way
-or other, in those individuals affected with libido? We can easily
-imagine, too, that as these alterations cannot be constant in lepra
-tubercularis, the symptom of which we are speaking must often be
-deficient, which explains why different authors who have observed cases
-of elephantiasis, particularly Alibert, Rayer and Cazenave, have not
-met with it. An affection of the genital organs may produce results
-completely opposite to libido: it may arrest the development of the
-genital organs when it appears before puberty. The individuals then
-present the marked characters of eunuchs, which has been observed by
-Adams, (Obs. on morbid poisons.) and probably Pallas, who asserts that
-the Tartans affected with elephantiasis, are averse to the pleasures of
-love. Farther, in lepra tubercularis, the sexual parts are often, and
-according to Alibert, most generally affected; this would necessarily
-extinguish all venereal desires. This probably was the case in the
-patient mentioned by Cazenave, in whom the testicles, glands and
-prepuce were found converted into a lardaceous tissue; and where, too,
-the corpora cavernosa were destitute of blood, and presented an evident
-hypertrophy of their septa.
-
-It often happens that the genital sense is exalted, because it is the
-only one, or nearly so, which continues. This is frequently seen in
-idiots, and in those affected with dementia. The imbeciles, if left to
-themselves, “says Esquirol,” sometimes at the period of puberty become
-affected with onanism, nymphomania, or hysteria. Idiots also often
-indulge in the most unrestrained masturbation. This can readily be
-imagined: these individuals are in a measure isolated by the debility
-or weakness of their senses and intelligence. As they receive no
-external impressions, those which are inherent, exercise unlimited
-power. The internal senses are then much more regarded, because they
-speak alone. That which is in others only a desire, becomes in idiots
-a want: hence there are many who seem to live, merely to eat, drink,
-and indulge in licentiousness. When speaking of the effects of onanism
-on the mental faculties, we have shown that the venereal sense becomes
-heightened, as these other faculties are weakened. This fact may be
-remarked, whatever may have been the cause of derangement: for many
-individuals become affected with onanistic satyriasis, because they are
-imbecile or idiotic. Finally, idiocy may be the effect and cause of
-onanism. Sometimes the disease appears first, sometimes the habit--but
-as soon as they exist they strive continually to increase, and we are
-unable to say which of the two exercises the stronger influence on the
-other.
-
-Our remarks on idiocy are equally applicable to cretinism, which is a
-variety of this affection. The cretins, though small, goitrous, hideous
-and imbecile, are extremely salacious, and this feeling is allayed by
-intercourse between them, or by onanism. A remarkable fact which has
-been observed twice, once in a cretin and once in an idiot, may throw
-some light on the organic causes of the inverse progress followed by
-the external and internal senses in this kind of patients: it is the
-_hypertrophy of the ganglionnary nervous system_. One of these cases
-is recorded by M. Schiffner. He found, on the cadaver of a cretin,
-that the ganglions of the great sympathetic nerve, situated along the
-vertebral column, were unusually large. The sympathetic nerve of the
-left side, on a level with the 6th vertebra presented a ganglion the
-size of a hen’s egg. Before this case of Schiffner, in 1819, Cayre
-also, in a thesis on idiotism, had mentioned the excessive development
-of the ganglionnary system, in one born an idiot. The cervical
-ganglions were three times their usual size; those of the thorax were
-larger than in the healthy state, and this was the case also with the
-semilunar ganglions.
-
-We have seen that individuals appear much more lascivious, as they
-become more stupid and insensible; venereal sensuality often developes
-itself under very different circumstances. It may be only an episode,
-and sometimes it is an effect of the general susceptibility. A person
-is lascivious, because he is alive to vivid impressions; because the
-genital organs, like the rest of the economy, are easily excited,
-and their excitement is vividly felt. This disposition occurs often
-in hypochondriac and hysterical people; that is, in individuals who
-are so susceptible as to be habitually sick. They are easily excited,
-and have nocturnal pollutions from the slightest cause. The genital
-organs, also like the others, may become affected by an irritation
-which is seated at a greater or less distance from them; for instance,
-in the stomach, lungs, skin, &c. Those persons who are affected with
-cutaneous diseases, which cause itching, are generally extremely
-lascivious. Symptoms similar to priapism and satyriasis, appear in
-numerous diseases. Nervous or flatulent colics have often been known
-to produce a similar effect. A woman observed in 1833, at Hotel Dieu,
-in the ward of Bouillaud, and whose case is reported by Donne, (Revue
-Med., June, 1833,) presented a phenomena, which, notwithstanding its
-strangeness, is explained by what we have said. She was thirty years
-old, of a strong constitution, and hysterical. After an attack of acute
-rheumatism affecting the wrist, her hand became exquisitely sensible,
-and the slightest friction upon it, procured for the patient all the
-sensations arising from coition. This aberration of the sensibility
-disappeared with the last traces of the rheumatic inflammation, and
-the part regained its natural state. A highly respectable man, Dr.
-Mirambeau, communicated to us the case of a child who procured similar
-sensations by pulling his umbilicus. His health suffered so much
-in consequence of this singular habit, that coercive measures were
-employed to check it. We must remark, however, that notwithstanding the
-sensations mentioned, this patient presented no erection nor any other
-phenomena in the genital organs, similar to those of the act of venery.
-
-_Of the things which may produce venereal excitement, and of the modes
-of preservation which are connected with them._ These things are all
-those which are capable of increasing the sensibility in general
-and particularly that of the organs of venery: the means are, the
-influences which may be used to act in a contrary direction.
-
-The venereal desire may develope itself at all seasons. The most
-favorable to its appearance, however, is spring. This fact was well
-known to the ancients: but it did not rest on a scientific foundation
-till recently. The confirmation of this fact is owing to the
-statistical labors of Villermé in France and of Quetelet and Smits in
-Belgium.
-
-Villermé proposed to establish, from the register of births, the
-periods of the year when conceptions occur most frequently. He arranged
-the months in the following order. May, June, April, July, February,
-March, December, January, August, November, September, October.
-
-Hence the three months when there are the most conceptions are April
-May and June, and those in which there are the fewest are September,
-October, and November. Hence it is in spring, at that period of the
-year when vegetation sprouts forth and when the trees are covered with
-foliage, when most animals seek their mates, that pregnancy is most
-common: while in autumn, that season in which vegetable life is as it
-were extinguished, is also the period when the human race labors least
-at reproduction. The results obtained by Quetelet and Smits, conform
-entirely with the above. It now remains to know whether the difference
-between spring and autumn arises from there being less procreative
-exertion or whether conception or impregnation at that time are more
-easy.
-
-To resolve this question Villermé consulted the criminal calendar to
-ascertain at what period of the year there were the most attempts
-at rape: and he found that it was the same as that when the most
-conceptions occur, that is in the spring. The same result was obtained
-by Quetelet and Smits. May not these crimes be more common in the
-spring because then men have more opportunity of being guilty, as
-at that time females may be found alone and loosely clothed, in the
-woods and distant places? But these same circumstances exist in the
-months of August and September, and yet the respective number of
-these crimes diminishes in these two months. Nor can this greater
-number of pregnancies be attributed to the fact that more marriages
-are contracted at one period of the year than at another, for the
-_maximum_ and _minimum_ of births can be referred in every country and
-at all times, with but few limitations to the same periods, while the
-_maximum_ and _minimum_ of marriages in different countries present
-great and numerous differences. We may then consider it as determined
-that man is subject to a certain extent to a kind of _periodical heat_,
-which returns every year in the spring.
-
-It is not the heat of weather which produces this phenomenon, for if
-this were the case, it would appear in July and August rather than
-in April and May: but it is _the return of early warmth_. Perhaps
-this phenomenon also arises from influences now unknown, which would
-contribute in early spring to the vernal resurrection of organized
-beings. The slight variations in the period of heat in men, in
-different climates, confirms what has been said as to the action of
-spring. Villermé having compared the different parts of France, of
-Europe and even of the two hemispheres, found that the maximum of
-conceptions is, like this season, more precocious in warm than in cold
-climates. There is then a period of the year when man is more disposed
-to indulge in these excesses and when his desires should be more
-carefully controlled. We have already seen that Wichmann regards the
-spring as a cause why diurnal pollutions are more active and frequent;
-the same may be said of nymphomania. In a female whose history has
-already been given and who was affected with this disease, the period
-of the greatest degree of salacity extended from the beginning to the
-end of this season.
-
-There is another observation which at first seems only of a moderate
-degree of importance but which may present practical deductions of
-great interest. Villermé has found that the maximum and minimum of
-conceptions are much less marked in the cities than in the country, and
-still less so in the large cities. This fact confirms our remarks on
-the influence of seasons, for it shows that this influence is less, the
-more individuals are exposed to it. It shows too how far the salacity
-of men may be influenced by his mode of living. This remark has long
-been made in regard to animals: the period of rutting ceases to be
-marked periodically when they pass from a savage to a domestic state.
-We have now to learn in what manner a retired life acts on the venereal
-sense. Another observation of M. Villermé seems to us to throw light on
-this topic.
-
-The law of _maximum_ and _minimum_, which has just been treated of,
-presents a remarkable exception which is seen in cold countries as
-Sweden, Finland, St. Petersburgh, &c. In these countries, exceptions
-occur most frequently in the months of December and January, in short
-in winter. Different causes have been supposed to account for this
-exception: there is but one however, which will explain it well--that
-is the manner in which the inhabitants of these countries are clothed
-during the cold season. By means of dress and warmth they then create
-an artificial climate by which they are enabled to resist the rigor
-of that in which they dwell. The whole body is enveloped in numerous
-thick and warm garments, which fit accurately, envelope it exactly
-and preserve for the body its natural temperature: placing these
-individuals in a position analogous to that of vegetables which are
-hastened in their growth by manure. Farther they preserve in their
-dwellings a degree of temperature which would be insupportable in a
-temperate climate. In fact if the inhabitants of the polar regions
-should keep civil registers of births, their examination would
-doubtless demonstrate that in these rude climates, the fine season is
-not that of amours. It is well known that puberty in these countries
-is more precocious, as is the case under the tropics. Thus the Samoid
-women menstruate at the age of 11 years and are often mothers at 12.
-(Klingstadt, _Memoire sur les Samoides_, pp. 41. & 43.) This is not to
-be wondered at when we consider that they live in subterranean caves,
-where there is a stifling heat produced by throwing water on redhot
-stones. Dwellings then in cold countries may be considered as hot
-houses which act on man as they do on vegetables.
-
-These facts established, let us consider their consequences; do they
-not prove, that an artificial climate may develope the venereal sense
-prematurely or too vividly? That on the coming of winter a young man
-ought not to be clothed too warm? That too many quilts should not be
-put on the bed at night? That the cold should be braved? That we should
-forbid too long a continuance in warm rooms? These principles are
-deduced naturally from observations on the seasons. It is unnecessary
-to say, that these rules, good as they are, are more particularly
-applicable to those who are suspected or convicted of masturbation.
-In our preceding remarks we have paid regard only to the temperate
-zones of the two hemispheres, that is, to those countries where there
-are four distinct seasons nearly equal in length. But if we approach
-the equinoctial line, those regions of the globe where the year is
-divided into a very long summer and a very short winter, the influence
-of seasons is effaced by that of _climate_. We shall not repeat in
-this place all that has been said in regard to the precocity of the
-inhabitants of warm countries, their ardor in love, the excesses to
-which they are addicted, the rapidity with which they grow old; all
-these facts are well known. But we will make a remark which seems
-to us important: if the habitual and long continued action of solar
-heat, hastens the appearances of the venereal sense, and gives it so
-much power, why will not the continued action of any other heat, for
-instance of clothing, dwellings, baths, &c., produce a similar result?
-It seems to us that the admission of the first fact necessarily implies
-the other. Thus whether we regard the influence of seasons exerted
-around us, or that of climates which are far distant, we always arrive
-at the conclusion that by a delicate education, and by taking care to
-preserve children from the slightest cold, we hasten the excitement
-of their sensual feelings, to which they are more liable to become
-victims. Hence in prescribing a change of scene for a young man
-addicted to onanism, we should be careful not to expose him to hot
-climates.
-
-Are there any emanations which have the power of deadening the
-venereal sense? From a case already mentioned, and which we owe to M.
-Villermé, we might suspect that emanations from stagnant waters have
-this effect: but it is probable that if procreation is less active in
-marshy countries during the most unhealthy seasons, it is because the
-number of sick is greater. It is well known that notwithstanding all
-emanations, the venereal sense may be very precocious, and may lead
-whole communities to indulge in excesses: we might cite as instances
-the inhabitants of the marshy parts of the Landes of Bordeaux, and the
-Solognese.
-
-The power which certain odors have of exciting to desire is by no
-means doubtful, at least so far as animals are concerned. Most of the
-mammalia at the period of rutting, exhale certain emanations which
-serve to inform the male at a distance of the presence of a female and
-to excite in him the desire of copulation. Even in the insect kingdom
-some facts exist which cannot be accounted for except on the principle
-of odorous effluvia. Thus if we shut up in a perfectly close box a
-female bombyx, we shall soon see males flying around it, who cannot be
-guided there by the sense of sight. Does any thing similar occur in
-the human family? Many authors assert the affirmative. “Odors,” says
-Cabanis, “act powerfully on the nervous system: they incite it to all
-pleasurable sensations: they communicate to it this slight disturbance
-which seems to be inseparable from it, and this because they exercise
-a special influence on the organs which are the seat of the most vivid
-pleasure granted us by nature. In infancy, the influence of smell is
-but slight: in old age, it is feeble: it is most active at the period
-of youth which is that of love.” (_Rapports du phys. an morale de
-l’homme_, vol. I, p. 222.) Among many nations even in remote antiquity,
-voluptuous females excited their visitors to desire by the cosmetic
-use of different perfumes, particularly by musk. This substance has
-been said to be capable of producing even nocturnal pollutions. (_Luc.
-Lebrœchus, Hist. Moschi_, ch. 24, p. 153.) On the other hand, we read
-that Henry IV. thought that the natural odor of the sexual parts was
-more powerful than any cosmetics. Notwithstanding these testimonials
-and many others of a similar character, which might be adduced, we
-believe that in our species, where the sense of smell has so little
-influence compared to what it has in animals, that odors have but a
-slight effect in exciting to sexual pleasures. We think it prudent
-however to forbid the abuse of cosmetics in young people.
-
-Irritation of the skin, particularly in the neighborhood of the sexual
-parts, may act on them as we have seen, and produce venereal desires.
-Debauched libertines have frequently sought pleasure in this, and
-have sometimes lashed themselves with thongs, or other instruments
-of torture. In the time of Nero, the art of invigorating the virile
-powers with green nettles was known and practised. Many authors have
-stated details on this topic which may be found in the treatise of
-Melbourne, (_De flagrorum usu in re venerea_, Lugd. Batav. 1643,[2])
-and an article by Virey. (_Dict. des Sc. Med._, art. _Flagellation_.)
-The pleasures of flagellation, however, also have their limits: it
-has therefore been prescribed to deaden carnal desires, as well as to
-excite them. More than one saint has flagellated himself with this
-hope. In order that it should be efficacious, it should be used with
-severity.
-
-It can easily be imagined that this remedy may have a very different
-effect from that proposed. Castigation, and also the denuding of the
-body, which is necessary, often have an effect on children, indicated
-by the erection of the penis. Young persons sometimes desire this
-punishment. The sensations caused by it have been so strong, as to
-be followed by an immediate emission. How many children have become
-addicted to onanism, in consequence of this imprudent punishment!
-how often has the fatal habit of onanism been encouraged by it!
-These consequences have been pointed out by many authors. Pic de
-la Mirandole, Rhodoginus, &c., have related instances of it. The
-following is from Serrurier. “One of my school-fellows,” says he,
-“found an indescribable pleasure in being whipped: he took every
-occasion to provoke the master, who never pardoned an offender, but
-had him scourged, by individuals to whom this duty was committed. This
-same school-fellow declared that he was sorry when the punishment was
-ended, because then the pollution was not complete. What has been
-the consequence of this horrid discovery. The unhappy person became
-addicted to onanism. Reduced to the lowest stage of consumption, in
-consequence of the habitual loss of semen, his death presents us a
-picture of depravity, and an instance of the danger to which one is
-exposed by this fatal passion.” Castigation is much more to be dreaded
-when practised by one of an opposite sex from that of the patient. Even
-young children notice this difference. Rousseau, describing the effect
-produced on him by being punished by Mademoiselle Lambercier, says,
-he was then eight years old, “For a long time she confined herself to
-threats, and the threat of punishment seemed very dreadful to me; but
-after it was performed, I found it less terrible than I expected; so
-much so, that it required all my natural sweetness to prevent me from
-seeking a return of the punishment, by averting it: for I found in
-the pain, and even in the shame, a mixture of sensuality which had
-left rather a desire, than a fear to be punished by the same hand.
-The same punishment from the hand of her brother would doubtless have
-been less agreeable.” Rousseau having exposed himself a second time to
-punishment, it was seen _by a certain sign_, that this chastisement
-did not produce the desired effect: he therefore escaped afterward.
-Thanks to his temperament, Rousseau did not contract, at that dangerous
-period, a habit which would have extinguished, at their source, those
-admirable faculties which were afterward developed.
-
-The importance of separating the sexes in schools can be seen from the
-preceding remarks: this is done in many institutions, and should be
-practised in all. The rod, too, should also be excluded from families,
-and physicians should explain to families the double danger of a loss
-of modesty, and of exciting the senses.
-
-Certain articles of clothing may excite the skin, cause an itching,
-and thus produce effects similar to those of flagellation. Haircloth
-and sackcloth, with which some orders of monks are now clothed, have
-contributed, it is said, together with the mode of life to that
-reputation for incontinence possessed by some orders of friars. A want
-of cleanliness has also had the same effect. Be this true or not, it
-is wise to avoid the use of flannels next the skin, particularly in
-young patients, and around the pelvis. Hence woollen pantaloons should
-always be lined. The importance of keeping the sexual organs clean, has
-already been pointed out; the same remarks apply to the whole body.
-
-This cleanliness must be maintained by lotions and baths. The former
-ought generally to be cold: this rule is seldom contra-indicated. As
-to baths, we would remark that hot baths ought seldom to be prescribed
-for onanists and for young persons generally, because of the excitement
-which they cause. Tepid baths should also be used with care, as they
-render one susceptible and delicate. Cold baths ought always then to be
-preferred, when the season and health of the patients permit. There are
-other rules to be mentioned hereafter.
-
-The venereal appetite may be much modified by food and drinks. This
-passion and the excesses with which it is attended may be connected
-with the diet used. Hence when we attempt to cure a young person of
-onanism a good selection of food and drink is very essential. It is
-therefore important to state the dietetic conditions by which the
-venereal appetite is excited or depressed.
-
-_Sine cerere et Baccho friget Venus_ is an old proverb, which however
-is too obsolete. Generally speaking abundance of good food is more
-favorable to venereal desires than a contrary mode of diet. This may
-be seen on a large scale by comparing years of plenty with those of
-scarcity. We can then remark how injurious periods of public distress
-are to the procreative power. This has long been observed, but has
-now been demonstrated beyond a doubt, by the patient researches of
-Villermé. He has ascertained from several statistical tables of
-population in France, that at the period of the revolution when
-the duty was removed from wine, salt, &c., when the laborers found
-themselves unusually prosperous, when they indulged in feasts and
-celebrations, in short, lived better, the number of births evidently
-increased. Eleven tables were examined by Villermé, and to this
-remark--he found but one exception. On the contrary, when the diet
-of the people is poor and insufficient, the number of conceptions
-diminishes and never resumes its level till abundance is restored. It
-would even seem that after the period of scarcity has passed away, it
-still continues to exercise an extraordinary degree of energy.
-
-These facts were very manifest after the bad harvest of 1816: the
-number of conceptions, proportionally speaking was less, from November
-1816 to September 1817, especially during the months of April, May,
-June, and July, than in other years. (_Ann. d’hyg. publ., Jun. 1834._)
-Similar observations have been made in animals: it is remarked that the
-period of heat supervenes when they are best fed, and that generally
-they are much more productive when they are domesticated than when in
-a wild state, where they are often liable to long fasts. Hence there
-is reason for prescribing fasting to deaden carnal passions. Villermé
-has remarked that in all those catholic countries of which he has seen
-statistics, Lent, as it is now observed, and particularly as it was
-formerly kept, seems to exercise an unfavorable influence on generation.
-
-The facts which have been mentioned may be explained in several ways:
-first by the action of plenty and scarcity on the health of the public.
-Probably in times of scarcity, a state of things is observed analogous
-to what is seen in marshy countries during the reign of epidemics.
-The action of abundance on the power of procreation may be explained
-also by the direct influence of the labor of digestion on the organs
-where the venereal sense is located. It is known that amorous desires
-are often developed directly after taking food. Nocturnal pollutions
-sometimes occur directly after lying down. Serrurier speaks of a
-maniac who had seminal emissions on taking food after long abstinence.
-(_Dict. des Sc. Med._, vol. xliv. p. 116.) Farther the effect alluded
-to may be produced as is readily imagined, more easily and forcibly
-when the excitement attending the labor of digestion is excessive when
-for instance, the repast has been great, composed of many exciting and
-stimulant articles of food and of good wine or with a small quantity of
-alcoholic drinks. Those individuals who are subject to pollution, feel
-the direct influence of these circumstances.
-
-Beside the immediate effect mentioned, a warm and analeptic diet by
-giving the body an increase of excitement and force, may render amorous
-desires more frequent and vivid. Thus the habitual free use of meats,
-game, pork, ragouts, spices, heavy wines, liquors, coffee, &c., must
-be considered as an indirect cause of venereal excesses, particularly
-if the persons who live on this regimen do not counteract its effects
-by active exercise. The use of vegetables, especially those which are
-not very nutritious, have contrary effects. This remark must not be
-considered too obsolete. A debilitating diet and excessive salacity
-sometimes coexist: The Landes of Gironde are a striking instance of
-this; their diet is very miserable; they live on vegetable soups made
-with rancid lard; broths of meal, of coarse bread, and water, pure or
-acidulated at most with vinegar, &c. Hence they are extremely thin, are
-dark and sallow, and have an appearance of unhealthiness: this however
-does not prevent their indulgence in love, to which they are extremely
-addicted.
-
-Different articles of food have been mentioned as contributing more
-than any others to excite the genital powers. Among them are found
-_fishes_. It would seem that this quality has long been attributed
-to them; this opinion however has not been received by moderns with
-much credit until it was admitted doubtingly by Montesquieu. (_Del
-l’esprit des lois_, Book xxiii. ch. 15.) Many authors have admitted
-this to be fact on the authority of this great man, and then instead
-of investigating whether it was true or not have attempted to assign
-the reasons for it. Thus the prolifick virtue of fish has been said
-to depend on the aromatics and other condiments with which they are
-prepared; on their seasoning: on the phosphorus contained in their
-flesh and more particularly in their milt: and by this fact, that
-populations on the sea-coast live almost exclusively on fish. This has
-been carried still farther: the parts of fishes which furnish the most
-of the seminal material have been determined: and this property has
-been ascribed to the milt, either because the semen is here secreted,
-or on account of the phosphorus which Fourcroy and Vauquelin have
-discovered in it. Some fishes however are thought to induce venereal
-passions more than others.
-
-We have attempted to find the origin of this opinion in regard to
-fish but without success. In fact it has not the support of popular
-notoriety which arises insensibly from daily observation. Thus
-Benoislon has proved directly by statistical facts that fecundity
-is not greater among the inhabitants of maritime coasts than among
-those who live in other places. (_Bulletin de Férussac_, Jan., 1827.)
-Villermé has noticed that in Greenland and among the Esquimaux, who
-live principally on fish, on sea-calves, that is, aliments, containing
-these oily parts, which are regarded as so prolific, women have rarely
-more than two or three children during their life. Besides if fish has
-the property ascribed to it, why is it that during Lent, that period
-of the year when this form of food is most used, the procreative
-power should be most inactive; a fact which is proved from documents
-collected in almost every country by the laborious investigations of
-Villermé. (_Annales d’hygiene publ._, Jan. 1831.) Hence it is extremely
-improbable that fish possesses this property, which it is important to
-establish in order not to discard from the regimen of youth, an article
-of diet which being both nutritious and slightly stimulating, is well
-adapted to prevent genital excitement or to subdue it.
-
-Many other articles of food beside fish have been regarded as
-aphrodisiac. Many insect eating reptiles, a bird called torcol and
-numerous insects of which it is useless to speak. Eggs have also been
-regarded as having the same property, and also truffles, mushrooms,
-artichokes, celery, cocoa and all its preparations, onions and
-condiments as ginger, pepper, and vanilla, and finally certain fruits
-as strawberries, apricots, peaches, pineapples, &c.
-
-Among the articles which we have named there are certainly some which
-being heating and exciting, may cause desire although containing
-nothing more specific than a great many substances which are esteemed
-as antiaphrodisiac, because being cooling and soothing they may
-produce the opposite effect. Among these latter, we find milk, which,
-according to Ste. Marie, generally contributes less to form the semen
-than most other articles of food. Among these also we may mention fresh
-vegetables and particularly the sorrel, purslain, lettuce, endive,
-cucumber, mushroom, melons, &c. To these may be added the flesh of
-young animals, chicken, lamb, veal, &c., and also cooling drinks,
-as orgeat, lemonade, &c. The regimen best adapted for appeasing all
-carnal desires consists as we have seen in an antiphlogistic diet which
-is composed of those fluids or solids which when introduced into the
-stomach are digested and assimilated with the slightest possible degree
-of excitement and heat. This regimen is that which should be prescribed
-to those patients who possess a certain degree of vigor and wish to
-protect themselves against urgent and dangerous desires.
-
-Different medicines have also been prescribed for the same purpose:
-many of them act in the same manner as the articles of food we have
-mentioned: of this character are tisans of marshmallows, violets,
-barley, emulsions, water distilled from lettuce, purslain, &c.:
-of a similar character are iced drinks, ice given internally, and
-even prepared ices. To calm the excitement of the genital organs
-drugs having a positive influence on the nervous system are also
-administered. Thus camphor given alone or in combination with nitre
-has often been prescribed for this purpose. The special action of this
-article on the urinary passages, leads to the belief that in some
-cases it may be useful. Primrose and St. Basil have boasted of the
-internal use of cicuta for moderating too ardent desires. Opium and its
-preparations have been prescribed for the same purpose. The use of this
-article by the Orientals and its effects upon them render us rather
-suspicious of it; there may be cases however in which it is useful.
-Belladonna deserves more confidence. Dr. Powell, in the London medical
-magazine for April, 1824, relates the case of a young girl 27 years
-old, who for more than three years experienced twice a month and even
-more frequently violent attacks of a libidinous hysteria: her cure was
-attributed to a potion composed in part of the tincture of belladonna,
-which was used to such an extent as to produce dilatation of the
-pupils. The results obtained by Chaussier, and by many others, from
-applying belladonna to the neck of the uterus either to combat rigidity
-in labor or to alleviate puerperal convulsions, lead us to think that
-medicine may prove efficacious in satyriasis and nymphomania. Thridace
-also may be tried in these cases, and Angelot has related a case of
-spermatorrhœa supervening in consequence of excesses at the table which
-was cured by this remedy. Distilled cherry-tree water also might be
-added which Louyer Villermay indicates as useful in nymphomania.
-
-Boracic acid, formerly termed the sedative salts of Homberg, has also
-been recommended to subdue amorous passions. This is true likewise of
-nitre, which, under this name, or that of Sal Prunelle and mineral
-crystal, has been much esteemed as an antiaphrodisiac. The use of this
-remedy according to Baldassar cured the man, who demanded so earnestly
-the removal of his testes, and whose case has already been mentioned:
-this salt was used because Prevatius, a physician at Pavia, having
-administered it to a man for an affection of the bladder rendered him
-impotent. The hemp and the willow have also been recommended: Etmuller
-believes particularly in the action of this latter; and recommends the
-extract of its leaves, and the sap obtained from its young branches in
-spring. (_Trait du bon choix des medicamens_, 1710. Lyons.)
-
-But among all drugs, those which are the longest known, and which were
-most esteemed, are the _agnus castus_ or _vitex_, and the _nenuphar_.
-Human credulity is severely taxed, to believe what has been said
-as to the virtues of these articles. The Greek women, according to
-Dioscorides, slept during the festivals of Ceres, on the leaves of
-the agnus castus to preserve their chastity. Arnaud de Villeneuve
-states that an infallible mode of preserving the breast from all
-men’s attempts, is to carry a knife, the handle of which is made of
-this wood. Even now its leaves and seeds are used both externally
-and internally in monasteries to support more easily the rigors of
-celibacy. At present, however, no one believes in its virtues. The
-same is true of the nenuphar. Its reputation, as soothing the genital
-organs, belongs to the early periods of sciences. It is mentioned in
-Dioscorides and Galen, and its history is as fabulous as that of the
-agnus-castus. The list of antiaphrodisiacs would terminate here, if
-Montegre had not mentioned a tree called mairkonsia, which grew in the
-East Indies, and which was used by some fakirs to render themselves
-impotent. Every day those children, who are designed to be fakirs,
-swallow a small roll of its leaves: the dose is gradually increased,
-and at the age of twenty-five, the effect is irrevocably produced. This
-tree is yet to be known by scientific men. (_Dict. des Se. Med._, _Art.
-Continence_.)
-
-Besides those articles which act as stimulants on the genital organs
-specially, these latter are excited by whatever tends to increase
-the sensibility in general. A great degree of susceptibility, and a
-moderate development of the venereal sense, may co-exist, and are often
-found combined: but this only proves that the genital apparatus may
-escape certain influences, and not respond to the excitements which
-are impressed on it. Thus, whatever _tends_ to develop, or to diminish
-the sensibility of a subject, must be considered not as necessarily
-modifying that of the genital organs, but as having the power to modify
-it, and as exercising this power in many cases.
-
-Now if we consider that the abuses of the genital organs arise most
-generally, because the sensibility of these organs has been excited
-too soon, or too vividly, we can imagine that a very great degree of
-susceptibility may predispose to these abuses, and, that consequently,
-to prevent and repress them, we must attend to every thing which favors
-the development of the genital organs. The power of sensation, like
-that of thought and action, is in many respects just what it is formed.
-The _education_, that is, the cultivation of these three faculties, may
-then give the senses a precocious language, and become indirectly a
-principle of excess. It may also, when properly directed, be a powerful
-means of preventing any excess. Let us see then how education acts, and
-how it is directed.
-
-It is only by exercise that the faculties are cultivated. It would
-be very wrong, however, to suppose that each one of them has an
-individual existence, and by use may be developed separately, and
-independent of the others. The human faculties seem to have a certain
-extent of power in common, which they divide in such a manner that one
-cannot increase except at the expense of the others. An individual
-who possesses excessive sensibility, rarely enjoys a great degree of
-muscular vigor. Those men who are noted for muscular strength, are
-seldom distinguished for the brilliancy of their intellect. Education
-then acts in two ways: directly, by developing the faculties which it
-exercises, and indirectly, by opposing the progress of those which it
-neglects. What it gives to one, it takes from another: it is both a
-positive, and a negative power. As to the modes of directing it, they
-act by regulating the use of the three faculties during the period
-of life when they are forming. This is not the place to say how far
-education should be carried, so that, in a physical, intellectual, and
-moral point of view, it should be good: we seek only to determine what
-it ought to be, in order that a too vivid, or too precocious a facility
-to receive impressions, may not become the causes of venereal excesses.
-
-It is not among the working classes, that those subject to hysteria and
-hypochondria, are most numerous. The fatigue of body, when constant,
-dulls the senses. On the other hand, whatever enervates, renders one
-susceptible to excesses. These facts, which are generally known, and
-are confirmed by daily observation, ought to show the influence of
-exercise and rest on the venereal passion. Onanism is arrested in those
-children, much more readily, who are extremely active and always in
-exercise, than in those who are sedentary. The period of puberty, this
-emancipation of the genital organs, is later, by two or three years,
-in those individuals who take just enough of repose to rest them from
-fatigue, than in those who take exercise simply because wearied of
-repose. Other things being equal, the adult who depends upon his daily
-labor for his bread, thinks less of sexual pleasures than the idler.
-Helvetius (_de l’homme sect._ 10, _note_ 4,) attributes the lascivious
-tastes of the Asiatics to their idleness, and the indifference of
-the Canadians to the pleasures of love, to the fatigues experienced
-by hunting and fishing. Villermé has attempted to show by statistics
-the influence of great labor on conceptions, but has not accomplished
-it. He, however, is disposed to regard the influence of fatigue on
-the sexual feelings, as the cause of the enormous difference said
-to have been observed in the Antilles, between the fecundity of the
-black slaves, and that of the whites. He remembers to have read, that
-in 1798, at St. Domingo, three marriages of blacks produced only two
-children, while each union between whites produced three children.
-
-It may be seen from the preceding remarks to what extent exercise is
-useful to young children. Unfortunately, the intellectual and moral
-necessities of our age cause physical education to be sacrificed in
-many respects. How many desires must necessarily be cherished, by
-confining the physical activity of young people, chained down as it
-were, hour after hour. How many men of mind have protested against the
-brief period of recreation allowed in our schools. Mr. Taillefer has
-done this in an excellent work published in 1824, on the improvement to
-be introduced in schools. This is true, also, of Pavet de Courtailles
-and Simon, (_Hygiene des Colleges, and Hygiene de la jeunesse_,) and
-in America by Dr. A. Brigham, of Hartford, whose work entitled, _The
-Influence of Mental Cultivation upon Health_, is full of judicious
-precept and sound logic. Gymnastic exercises, which are now beginning
-to be generally used in boys’ schools, and to be adopted in some
-seminaries for young ladies, compensate in some measure for their
-enervating education. Simon (of Metz) asserts that masturbation,
-formerly so destructive in the Orphan Asylum at Berne, has been
-expelled from it by introducing exercises. He adds, too, that this
-scourge has also disappeared from the schools of Switzerland, since
-mutual instruction was introduced, which, as is well known, obliges
-children to change their position frequently.
-
-A very active life may remedy a too great degree of lasciviousness.
-Hunting, particularly, has been recommended for this purpose. ‘Diana
-has been regarded as the enemy of Love,’ says Rousseau, “and the
-allegory is just: the languor of love only comes from sweet repose.
-Violent exercise extinguishes the tender emotions.” Rullier has known
-hunting to produce in a man forty years old, who was passionately
-addicted to it, a true anaphrodisia, which disappeared when the patient
-adopted, in accordance with the advice of his physician, another mode
-of life. Some exercises, however, produce a contrary effect, viz.:
-those which excite the genital organs directly. Riding in a carriage,
-especially if it jolts much, and still further riding on horseback,
-may act in this manner. This effect was known to the ancient authors.
-Aristotle speaks of it. All those accustomed to riding know that the
-motions of the horse often produce an erection, and sometimes an
-involuntary emission of semen. A similar occurrence may take place from
-riding in a carriage. Serrurier has known this to happen in himself.
-
-The sitting posture, when long continued, excites the genital organs.
-Simon thinks so; because this attitude, by the pain and obstruction
-which it causes to the circulation, brings the blood to the lower parts
-of the trunk, and keeps it there: hence, it exposes the young man to
-excitement of the genital organs, and to engorgements of the spermatic
-cord: even hemorrhoids appear in those who ride and sit much. This
-author concludes by condemning the custom, in schools, of keeping the
-students sitting the greater part of the day. He thinks that the number
-of hours spent in school should be less, and that the students should
-study as many of their lessons as possible, in the erect posture. He
-recommends, also, that the seats should be so constructed as not to
-generate much heat, as do those which are stuffed.
-
-The action of intellectual labor is extremely analogous to that of
-muscular exertion. Persons whose minds are much occupied, who are
-devoted to their studies, are generally but slightly sensual in their
-feelings. There are some literary men who thus have become prematurely
-impotent. On the other hand, individuals whose minds are naturally dull
-and heavy, the imbeciles and idiots, are frequently remarkable for
-their extreme salacity. The cultivation of the intellect then is not in
-itself a predisposing cause of venereal abuses, but it may become so
-indirectly, either by the physical inaction which it demands, or by the
-nature of the ideas it excites. We have spoken of the former, and will
-now consider the latter.
-
-The moral influences, that is, those which are impressed on the senses
-through the medium of the intellect, often predispose young patients
-to the abuses of which we are treating. The action of these influences
-is direct: it is by the impressions which they develop, that they may
-give to the senses the power of holding a language, and of exercising
-a precocious influence. They are particularly to be dreaded when they
-address the instinct of propagation, and excite it before the organized
-system is perfectly developed. The moral education also, that education
-which consists in keeping from the young certain impressions, does not
-act until their time has come, and must be considered as one of the
-most efficacious modes of preventing the premature abuse of venereal
-pleasures.
-
-Notions of love may, when acquired too soon, excite in the soul a
-sensation which is first vague, then more precise, and which only
-requires an opportunity to become a fatal passion. Thus the reading
-of romances, and books which always interest the soul in love scenes
-which are painted in bright colors, ought to be strictly forbidden to
-young people. The same is true of theatrical representations. Here love
-is in a measure materialized: we see the persons who are animated by
-this passion: they express themselves in a manner to make one really
-think they feel it: they attempt by every kind of coquetry to deceive
-and delude the public, and even to excite desires. Art lends her aid
-to eloquence and gesture to move the heart, and the fear of failing to
-enlist the feelings, often induces the actor to overstep the bounds
-of nature, and then he represents libertinism, not love. Conceive of
-the effect which this must produce upon one who is uninitiated, who
-is thus, as it were, introduced into a new world: the venereal sense
-becomes excited sooner than it ought to be, and desires demand to be
-satisfied before the body has attained its strength, and consequently
-before legitimate pleasures are practicable or allowable.
-
-Balls, parties, and assemblies, all opportunities of seeing the world
-in its gayest and most attractive attire, are dangerous to youth.
-Generally speaking, the habitual intercourse of the two sexes ought
-to be avoided as much as possible. In a report made to the Industrial
-Society of Malhouse, as to the number of hours which children ought
-to labor daily, the evening labor which brings the different sexes
-together in the workshops, is mentioned as a great source of trouble.
-One advantage of schools is, that the different sexes are kept
-distinct. In families, and we do not except those which are models of
-morality, the opportunities of intercourse between boys and girls are
-too frequent. Certain emotions, of an obscure character at first, are
-felt: curiosity is excited, and soon the secret of solitary indulgence
-is found. Young persons may also, under their paternal roof, acquire
-dangerous notions in regard to the material differences between the
-sexes, and other facts which are the consequence of them. “I do not
-see,” says Rousseau, “but one mode of preserving in children their
-innocence; which is, that all those around should respect and love it.”
-Unfortunately, the smallness of dwelling houses in cities, and other
-necessities, particularly that of watching their offspring obliges
-parents to keep their children near them, and their curiosity being
-always on the alert, often leads them to unfortunate discoveries. Abbe
-Chappe has stated the manner in which the Samoides live in their huts,
-as an active cause of libertinism. These individuals do not use beds,
-but lie, almost naked, on straw and on benches. The children witness
-much that should be concealed from them; become loose in their morals,
-and hence they have to be married early to prevent excesses. (_Travels
-in Siberia, Vol. 1._) If accidental observations in the most moral
-families may be attended with the results just mentioned, what must be
-the consequence of constant depraved manners; their empire is so great
-at this age when the mind is unexperienced, and is always ready to
-adopt the impressions of the moment. In pity then to youth, let every
-magistrate prevent the publicity of immodesty and vice; do not let
-prostitution be sanctioned by the law: for when our sons and daughters
-are liable to find out in an instant what we have so carefully
-concealed from them, the responsibility should rest not simply on those
-unfortunate beings who follow such a course of life, but also on the
-part of those who having the power to prevent it, close their eyes, and
-permit, or even authorize it.
-
-_Rules relating to the direct and special causes of onanism._ The habit
-of onanism may have three origins: it may be, 1st, that the individual
-discovers it spontaneously; 2d, that the vice may be taught him; 3d,
-that being unable to satisfy his desires for coition, he seeks a
-resource in onanism.
-
-We have already seen that an unusual irritation of the genito-urinary
-mucous membrane may develop venereal excitement capable of causing
-satyriasis and nymphomania. This irritation may also act in another
-manner. The itching it occasions may cause the hands to be carried to
-the genital organs; unknown sensations are produced, and masturbation
-is accidentally discovered. We see by this how necessary it is in young
-patients to protect these parts from all sources of itching. Sometimes,
-too, a knowledge of this vice comes from accident. Hence children at
-an early age should be taught habits of modesty; all handling of the
-genital organs should be prohibited. Children should not be allowed to
-keep their hands in their pockets. Neither should they be left alone
-long: the necessity of observing, which is so vivid at their age,
-is exercised on themselves, when they find nothing else to interest
-them, and they sometimes make dangerous observations. It is in bed
-particularly that this evil is most liable to happen; hence they should
-be taken from their beds as soon as they awake, and the hour of rest
-should not long precede that of sleep. Many children have been led to
-onanism by their efforts to resist the wish to urinate. The pressure
-exercised on the penis by pressing the thighs firmly against each
-other, has excited sensations which they have attempted to re-produce.
-We mention this cause of onanism as being much more common than is
-generally supposed.
-
-There is another cause, which is much more rare, but which deserves to
-be known: domestic animals, as cats and dogs, have sometimes licked the
-sexual parts of young children, particularly girls, and have excited
-a sense which ought to sleep. Hufeland publishes a remarkable case of
-this character in support of some peculiar views on venereal disease,
-and adds that Ruggieri some years before, published in the medical
-journals, a case where, by the licking of a dog, ulcers of a bad
-character were developed in the genitals of two old maids. (_Bibliot.
-Med._, May, 1821, p. 250.)
-
-Most frequently, however, the habit of onanism arises from direct
-provocation, from instruction. Sometimes this provocation can be
-attributed only to imprudence. Thus nurses sometimes titillate the
-genital organs in children to stop their cries. We have already stated,
-from Biett, the instance of a young girl who had thus contracted
-this bad habit, and who was cured by the amputation of the clitoris:
-this case arose probably only from ignorance. Sometimes, however,
-servants teach their masters’ children from wilfulness. One should be
-particularly careful of female servants, as it is to them that young
-children are generally entrusted. Male domestics are generally to be
-feared, only for those young persons who are near the age of puberty.
-The wish to please their young master, often induces them to give the
-most disgusting lessons. Most frequently, however, these lessons come
-from their associates, the older boys teaching those who are younger.
-
-If among young patients onanism is practised for itself, it is
-afterward only an apology for the want of more legitimate enjoyments.
-Celibacy, in adults, is with some few exceptions the only cause of
-onanism. This practice, and others still more revolting, are common
-among monastic orders, as the consequence and punishment of vows made
-contrary to the laws of nature. Polygamy, the quasi celibacy to which
-the females of many countries submit, also causes great derangements
-in the system. A kind of consumption has been described to which the
-Turkish women are subject, and which can be traced to no other cause.
-(_Journal de Med., Vol._ 44, p. 539.) It is in prisons, however, where
-there is no moral feeling, that this vice is most prevalent. Villermé
-remarks, that the amount of this vice in prisons, is almost incredible.
-Young and old abandon themselves to it so freely, that the physicians
-of the prisons of the department of the Seine, attribute the frequency
-of pulmonary consumption, of cramps in the stomach, muscular debility,
-weakness of sight, and of the intellectual faculties, to this cause
-alone. This physician considers onanism as one of the causes of the
-excessive mortality existing in the depots of mendicity. (_Dict. des
-Sc. Med._, _art. Prison_.)
-
-Sailors also often abandon themselves during their long voyages to
-this vice. Many adults, and particularly females, seek in solitary
-indulgence a compensation for the restraints imposed on them by
-laws and customs. Even animals indulge. Montegre has published some
-interesting details on this subject. (_Dict. des Sc. Med._, _art.
-Continence_.)
-
-We have said that onanism is performed so easily that it is much more
-to be feared than sexual intercourse. If then the physician has to
-choose between the two, he ought not to hesitate. In human things
-we cannot always choose between an injury and a benefit. Sometimes
-the selection is between a greater and a lesser evil. We may then
-without detriment to physical and moral laws, counsel the young man
-who indulges in onanism, to gratify his feelings in a less dangerous
-manner. This also was Rousseau’s opinion. He says, in his Emile, “If
-a tyrant must conquer you, I would prefer to yield you to that from
-which you can be released most easily: and you can be weaned from
-females more readily than from yourself.” The physician in these cases
-should recommend marriage.
-
-This advice, too, is sanctioned by experience. Many young men after
-indulging in sexual intercourse, have commenced onanism; despising the
-latter, after exercising the former. “We have known a father,” say
-Fournier and Begin, “who finding his son disobeyed his advice, married
-him, and with success.” The same remedy has often been tried, and with
-good effect. A single coition has often sufficed to appease excessive
-ardor in females, and we could state several cases of nymphomania which
-have been thus immediately cured. Pregnancy also has been followed by
-the same results: this fact was known to the ancients and is mentioned
-in a work ascribed to Hippocrates. Panarolus, Matthew de Grado, and
-others, have related cases of females affected with nymphomania, who
-are never calm except during pregnancy. The following fact, observed by
-Esquirol, shows the influence of coition and pregnancy on the genital
-system. “A strong and healthy girl, of good family, nineteen years
-old, became affected with hysteria, with violent and almost constant
-convulsions. After a long and ineffectual course of medical treatment,
-this young woman disappeared from her father’s house, and all inquiries
-for her were in vain. After a few months, Esquirol, passing in the
-evening through a noted and dissipated quarter of Paris, was stopped by
-a female, whom he recognised to be his patient. On inquiring what she
-was doing, she answered, “Getting well.” For eighteen months this girl
-was a prostitute of the lowest order. She miscarried twice, and finally
-returned to her father’s house perfectly well. This woman is now
-married, a mother, and extremely circumspect in her conduct.” (_Dict.
-des Sc. Med._, _art. Continence_.)
-
-
-§ 2. SECOND INDICATION. TO RESIST THE DESIRE OF ONANISM.
-
-When a desire can be satisfied, and is not, it is because the will is
-enchained, or this is distracted by circumstances more powerful than
-desire. Thus then it is possible to inspire an individual with certain
-fears, or by distracting his thoughts to make his will resist his
-desires.
-
-The fear of God and his ministers may have great influence over the
-minds of many, and preserve strict continence. The fear of confession
-has often, to our knowledge, produced a denial of desire in young
-persons. At the present day, however, this latter influence cannot be
-depended on much, and confessors, by their imprudent questions, have
-often excited curiosity in hearts yet innocent.
-
-The fear of transgressing the rules of modesty taught in youth,
-restrains some individuals. Others abstain because they fear the
-correction and reproaches of a father, and think on the shame with
-which they would be covered were their secret known. Chastisement has
-sometimes had the effect of rendering the guilty ones very circumspect.
-But of all fears, that which has produced the most effect on onanists,
-is the fear of disease and death.
-
-Onanists rarely believe what is told them by parents and others, as to
-the dangers of their course, but place more credit on what they read
-in books; and of these, Tissot is the only one which possesses much
-reputation. It has been much read, and although attended with great
-good effects, it has not always been useful. Many think its statements
-exaggerated, and therefore injurious. We have known it to fail entirely
-of its desired purpose, and to cause deplorable effects. On the whole,
-however, it has done much good, which it would be unjust not to
-acknowledge. At the same time, we must say, that a knowledge of the
-reproaches against Tissot, and the desire to avoid them, have had no
-influence over a word of the present treatise. In composing it we have
-been actuated by a desire to tell the truth, and have more than once
-remarked that we must not judge of the common effects of onanism by the
-cases which have been published, as those only which are very severe,
-appear in print. We have also said that the most common effects of
-onanism consist rather in certain vitiations of temperament, than in
-diseases having a precise form, and a distinct place in the systems
-of nosology. We have also shown how rapidly the health is generally
-restored when indulgence in onanism ceases. But this was done not to
-exercise any influence over the minds of those who might read the book,
-but simply to do justice to the truth.
-
-The word of a physician may frequently however produce a change in
-the patient; more frequently than the reading of a book. He should
-not hesitate to speak boldly, for if it be requisite he can afterward
-modify his opinion. The effect of an opinion as follows, “In three
-months you will be a dead man” is often very great. The onanist
-trembles and becomes pale: his heart beats quickly, his strength fails.
-Do not regret it, it is not by encouragement that you will save him
-from himself. Add however that in a few months he will be a well man,
-provided he will renounce his bad habits. These words of hope will
-console him and encourage him to resist his evil desires. Frequently
-however the impression caused by this language is soon effaced. In this
-case another remedy must be sought for. The language and tone of the
-physician too should vary according to the person addressed; but he
-should always present the certainty of death if the vice is continued,
-and that of relief if it be arrested.
-
-Sometimes the onanist leaves his old habit very gradually, a course
-which is recommended by Swediaur. This course may be pursued for two
-reasons: the first is that it is more easy to quit this habit by
-degrees than to break it off violently: the second that it is not
-always prudent to leave off habits suddenly even if they are bad.
-Persons have sometimes been blinded by being taken from their dungeons
-too suddenly.
-
-When a young man however finds himself unable to resist the force of
-his desires notwithstanding the perusal of books and the advice of
-his physician, there is still one resource, which is the sight of
-an onanist dying. Approach and look at him: he was recently healthy
-and his prospects bright. He indulged in onanism: see what he is now;
-friends and physicians remonstrated with him but in vain; he would
-listen to nothing, he believed nothing. Now however he believes, but
-it is too late, for in a few days his earthly career will be closed.
-If terror does not affect him who witnesses this doleful picture you
-cannot produce it. A surgeon named Bertrand aware of the power of this
-mode of instruction constructed in wax two figures which represented
-onanists of both sexes. These figures were exhibited to those suspected
-of indulging in onanism and produced it is said very beneficient
-effects.
-
-The ancients and we will cite Avicenna, and Paul of Egina, recommend
-that we should attempt to excite in the minds of those addicted to this
-vice an interest about external objects. _Distraction_ is then a mode
-which may be usefully recommended to those onanists over whom their
-desires have not much power. Travelling, study, recreation, in fact
-every thing which can give the mind a strong and new direction, should
-be recommended, and may have the effect of distracting the onanist from
-his bad habit.
-
-
-§ 3. THIRD INDICATION. REMOVE FROM THOSE WHO HAVE THE WISH TO
-MASTURBATE THE POWER OF DOING SO.
-
-Masturbation is possible only under the two following conditions: first
-there must be an opportunity to indulge in secret; next there must
-be a possibility of indulging. Hence by frustrating these conditions
-we can prevent onanism, the wishes of the onanist to the contrary
-notwithstanding.
-
-The opportunities for onanism are all embraced under one term,
-_isolation_. It is necessary for the onanist to be alone. Hence
-watchfulness, that precaution which makes the young man constantly
-observes, which exposes him every moment to detection and consequently
-to shame, to reproaches and to punishment for his fault, is a powerful
-means of preventing it.
-
-Watchfulness should be particularly practised over young people, when
-they are undressed, in bed, in the bath or in the privy. Hence the
-young patient should undress, go to bed and rise under your inspection.
-If this be not sufficient, he should share your bed. This measure is
-frequently the only way to prevent onanism. In large boarding schools
-there should be no private rooms: the sleeping chambers should be
-extensive, and a lamp, which would give sufficient light to assist your
-watchfulness, but not enough to prevent sleep, should burn in it all
-night. The masters and those who have charge of the pupils ought to
-examine in silence at different hours and the most perfect quiet should
-exist in the apartment. Here too the hours of retirement and of rising
-should be calculated according to the ages, so that the suspected or
-guilty might never go to bed except to sleep. Be watchful of those who
-stay long in privies: those however with ample accommodations are not
-so dangerous as those which are single. In some schools the doors of
-the privies are open at the top, so that an adult can look into them.
-Need we add that persons who are suspected should be watched in the
-bath.
-
-Onanism is executed with the hand and thighs on the sexual parts or
-by rubbing these parts against external bodies. Different modes have
-been proposed to obviate and prevent these. The most simple of all is
-to oblige the children to keep their hands out of bed. This plan when
-it can be observed is often sufficient, particularly in boys. Besides
-this we knew of only one remedy, the purpose of what can be concealed,
-viz., the application of a cold cataplasm to the sexual parts, a plan
-we have recommended several times. Pavet de Courtielle proposes the use
-of a chemise reaching below the feet and which is drawn together at the
-bottom: this remedy may be efficacious. The remedies which remain to
-be treated of are essentially coercive: hence the chance of success is
-smaller the older and stronger the patients are.
-
-The hands may be tied to keep them from the sexual organs, and the feet
-also may be tied so as to keep the thighs separated. The child too may
-be placed in a straight waistcoat fastened behind, which may force the
-arms to rest on the chest. Different apparatus has been contrived also
-to keep the thighs asunder. One is composed of thick pieces of cork
-which are attached to the inside of the thighs. Drawers opening behind
-are sometimes used: these serve to imprison the lower part of the trunk.
-
-A kind of truss is sometimes used to preserve the sexual parts from
-external contact. The principal piece of this is of metal, either
-silver or tin: for females its form is triangular, and for boys
-it represents a sort of mould, in which the penis and scrotum may
-be placed: the bandage is kept in place by springs, like those of
-herniary bandages. To add to the security of this apparatus it is
-sometimes applied to a dress which opens only behind. In young and
-feeble children these means are exceedingly efficacious, as experience
-has proved. The art of the onanist has even sometimes evaded these
-bandages. The following case occurred in the practice of Reveille
-Pariset; a little girl 7 years old, whose health failed every day
-having been detected in onanism, her mother instead of reproaching her,
-gave her to understand that it was the custom to apply a bandage to
-girls of her age. This bandage was fitted very accurately and attained
-the purpose desired; the health of the child being rapidly established.
-Soon however the symptoms reappeared and more violently than before.
-The bandage was examined and it was found to be undisturbed. She
-however was watched and it was found that she used a quill for the
-purposes of onanism, which she slipped in under the bandage. After
-this, the mother stayed with her daughter all the time, and by her
-vigilance the child was saved.
-
-These mechanical bandages have other inconveniences which limit their
-use. First they cannot be employed in boarding schools as they become
-the subject of remark; and then they keep up in the genital organs
-a constant heat, irritation and moisture. The edges of the principal
-piece also may cause deep excoriations. For all this, however they are
-often useful and ought not to be neglected.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-OF THE MODE OF REPAIRING THE INJURIES ARISING FROM VENEREAL EXCESSES.
-
-
-In therapeutics we proceed in two ways; sometimes tracing the symptoms
-to their cause, we attempt to destroy this cause in the organ in which
-it is situated, and sometimes we attend only to symptoms. The same plan
-is applicable to the abuses of the genital organs, which as we have
-already seen forms a real disease.
-
-The most efficient way to arrest the evil caused by these abuses, is
-to stop them. When this is done, order is established very rapidly.
-Hence the preservative means are in our view better than any remedial
-measures. Often however, when these excesses have been frequently
-repeated and long continued, the genital organs continue without
-provocation the work which was commenced by onanism. Thus _involuntary
-pollutions_ keep up and increase a degree of exhaustion and other
-complaints which would otherwise disappear. In this case the treatment
-to be followed is to arrest the pollutions. These generally result, as
-we have said, from an inflammation of the seminal passages analogous
-to that existing in the urethra in blenorrhœa. This fact has lately
-been demonstrated anatomically by Lallemand and M. Davila. Hence the
-treatment of involuntary spermatorrhœa resembles in many respects that
-of chronic catarrh. The following are the principal remedies to be
-employed.
-
-First must be placed cold applications to the genital organs; of these
-pure water and ice are more generally and successfully employed. In
-using these, Coelius Aurelian employed sponges. Wichmann wet cloths,
-and Ste. Marie, who preferred ice, used a bladder. Cold washes and
-affusions to the part and cold douches to the perineum, and hipbaths
-and seabaths have also been used. Lallemand who repudiates enemata too
-hot or warm thinks that those which are cold may be useful. Sulphurous
-baths have likewise been employed by Lallemand, in the manner described
-in his work in diseases of the genito-urinary organs. Davila in his
-thesis relates instances cured in this mode, and also the case of a
-young man who was cured of a diurnal pollution by introducing into the
-urethra a sound, which was retained there as long as the patient could
-bear it. Lallemand entertains the same opinion, and has also employed
-acupuncture and he says with success. He has known patients who after
-the application of needles between the posterior parts of the bursœ and
-the anus, have passed three or four months without pollutions.
-
-Some practitioners have succeeded by directing their remedies to the
-cerebellum and the spinal marrow.
-
-Many medicines have been administered internally for losses of semen.
-Those most in repute are the preparations of iron and quinine,
-either separately or together. Ferruginous waters, particularly
-those of Spa, and the oxides of iron, have often been used. Wichmann
-recommends several glasses of Spa water every morning combined with
-some preparation of cinchona: Serrurier has related a case showing
-the efficacy of this treatment. Lallemand thinks that cinchona and
-generally all remedies which contain tannin, only benefit temporarily.
-Many authors also disapprove of the use of astringents and tonics in
-spermatorrhœa, attributing to them among other inconveniences, that of
-causing constipation.
-
-Many narcotic substances have also been used. We have related a case
-where thridace has succeeded. Belladonna also might be useful. In a
-patient mentioned by Serrurier, opium seems to have exasperated the
-complaint. Davila however thinks that opiates have been prescribed with
-success: but he dreads the constipation which they generally cause.
-Other remedies as the mineral acids, phosphoric lemonade, lime water,
-some preparations of lead, magnesia, ipecac, &c. have been used. Might
-not advantage be derived from the use of balsam copaiva and pulverized
-cubebs in some cases of spermatorrhœa.
-
-We have already made some remarks on regimen, when speaking of the mode
-of avoiding or calming the venereal sense, and our rules for restoring
-individuals exhausted by onanism, will be stated hereafter.
-
-The object of the treatment stated is to remedy the disease, caused
-by the loss of semen. A mode has been proposed by Wender to prevent
-this physically; this consists in the compression of the canal of the
-urethra: it is accomplished by means of a pair of forceps made of
-flexible wood, six to seven inches long, and from twelve to eighteen
-lines thick. This forceps is used by passing the penis between its two
-branches, one being above, and the other below; the two extremities
-are then tied with a cord. In this manner the penis is compressed and
-slightly confined; which is sufficient, says Wender, to remove all
-voluptuous sensation from this part, and to arrest the pollution. He
-has given the details of a case obtained by these means, and by the
-proper administration of tonics.
-
-Wender’s forceps may have several inconveniences, and may frequently
-fail of the proposed end. But has it not been too much ridiculed, and
-is it not susceptible of improvement? Serrurier thinks that the idea
-may be turned to advantage, and Reveillé Pariset assures us that he has
-used it twice in cases of pollution, and with success. (_Revue. Med._,
-_April_, 1828, p. 94.)
-
-Having mentioned the course to pursue in order to reach the seat of the
-disease, that is, the voluntary and involuntary pollutions, let us now
-speak of their effects. One of two things must happen; either these
-pollutions pursue their work, or finally the economy becomes insensible
-to their action. The first supposition is that least favorable to
-success: the physician prescribes for effects while the cause continues
-to act; he _doctors_, as it is called, for symptoms; and it is the
-same as if one should attempt to cure gastritis or pleuritis, without
-attending to the pleura or stomach. This, however, is no reason for
-abstaining completely from treatment. We may also sometimes retard the
-progress of the disease, or calm any painful and disquieting symptom.
-The physician has a much better prospect of success, when there is no
-longer a habit to destroy the health, and when no pollutions occur.
-We shall not attempt in this place to give the treatment proper for
-the different diseases which may be produced by onanism. Myelitis,
-dementia, amaurosis, epilepsy, &c., &c., whether caused by onanism or
-not, require special remedies, which are stated in works which treat of
-these affections. We would remark, however, that when these diseases
-are caused by onanism, it is perfectly futile for the physician to
-attempt to treat the disease, unless the habit of self pollution be
-arrested. In this place we will only mention that consumption, that
-exhaustion, in fact, that deterioration, which we have described in the
-third chapter of our first part.
-
-Onanistic deterioration presents two very distinct phenomena: 1st,
-the consumption of the strength; 2d, the excitement of the senses.
-Thus, then, to restore the strength without increasing, and even, if
-possible, to diminish the general disposition to receive impressions,
-are the two indications to be fulfilled.
-
-But before commencing, it is well to remember that this cannot be done
-in a few days. A disease which is gradual in its appearance is removed
-in the same manner. The physician who would attempt to hurry it by
-employing active remedies, would soon exhaust the system.
-
-The best mode of reparation is found in diet: the body must be
-recruited by food, and inasmuch as only those things are nutritious
-which are digested, the first rule to be observed is, that all the
-conditions of good digestion are properly observed. Inasmuch as these
-conditions present nothing special in respect to onanists, we shall
-be very brief, referring to our previous remarks on this subject. It
-must first be considered, that in patients accustomed to onanism the
-digestive functions are always deranged, or are liable to be so.
-
-The slightest error in diet may aggravate this state considerably;
-which is, in itself, an evil, and may add to the trouble of cure.
-Hence, if the rules of a good regimen should always be vigorously
-observed, this necessity is still more imperious when patients indulge
-in onanism.
-
-Every article of food which is difficult to digest should be forbidden,
-and among articles which can be digested, those should be selected
-which contain the most nourishment, and are the least exciting. Thus
-condiments, which are but slightly nutritious, and are very exciting,
-ought never to be used, unless they are indispensably necessary to
-digestion, and then only in very small quantities. Milk is very
-nutritious, and does not excite; it should therefore be preferred
-by all those who are exhausted. If cow’s milk be found difficult of
-digestion, asses’ milk and that of woman has been recommended. But if
-this article be difficult of digestion, it should be prohibited, for
-then it is injurious. The flesh of young animals, particularly veal
-and poultry, is good; but beef and mutton is still better, for they
-contain more nutritious matter in a smaller compass. These articles,
-when roasted or broiled, are better than when boiled. Fresh fish is
-generally a suitable article of food: we allude to those kinds which
-are easily digested, as shad, perch, &c. Soups, especially those of
-beef, turtle, and the different broths, should always, in order to be
-digested, be mingled with solid articles of food, and should even take
-their place, if these latter cannot be digested.
-
-Farinaceous substances, and especially bread, rice, potatoe, &c., are
-very suitable, because they are nutritious, and but slightly stimulant;
-but they are often bad to digest.
-
-The rule _little and often_, is the rule to follow, in regard to the
-division of food. The patient has always taken too much food: if he
-feels perfectly satisfied, or if he experiences any inconvenience
-after it, the quantity of nourishment should be so regulated that
-nothing of this kind could occur. The meals should be taken frequently,
-only because they are small. We prefer to give broth warm, or more
-frequently still, cold, by spoonfuls, and have seen a benefit from it.
-
-Drinks are not very nutritious, and generally stimulate much. Those
-which are given to strengthen, only do so for a few moments. They
-excite, and do not nourish. If the patient takes them to quench
-thirst, he should take as little as possible, for they also must be
-digested. In this respect wines may be useful. To choose among them,
-the experience of the patient must be consulted. A general rule governs
-the use of drinks at meals, viz.: to attain the proposed end with the
-smallest quantity of drink. Very dry wines, liquors, coffee, tea, &c.,
-ought not to be permitted, unless absolutely necessary to digestion.
-The use of Selzer water, and particularly of Spa water, may be very
-advantageous. Very cold drinks are often the only ones suitable to the
-stomach.
-
-Medicines have often been administered, either to strengthen the
-system, or to re-establish the digestive powers. Of these, the most
-useful are preparations of iron, quinine, and bitters. It is possible
-to improve the digestive organs with these drugs, and also with others;
-but this is not the place to give the treatment of diseases which are
-marked by difficulty of digestion. I know that some tonics may be used
-with great advantage, especially if they are given in such doses as to
-have no direct and immediate effect, particularly if their local action
-on the stomach and intestines be not too powerful.
-
-Very cold baths, like every remedy capable of having an intense effect,
-should be forbidden to patients exhausted by onanism. But if the baths
-are simply cold, and particularly if they are taken in running water,
-or in the sea, they may strengthen the constitution. Dry, or aromatic
-frictions on the limbs, or along the vertebral column, are useful. The
-exercise should be moderate exercise, for too much fatigue exhausts
-the strength, instead of increasing it, and might excite or hasten the
-development of one of the diseases produced by onanism. A pure and dry
-air, like that breathed in hilly countries, may also have a favorable
-influence on the economy generally, or on digestion.
-
-
-
-
-APPENDIX.
-
-
-The preceding pages may seem to many of our readers more particularly
-adapted to France; and it may be presumed that onanism is not so
-frequent in America. This however is a mistake: an able writer in that
-valuable periodical, the Boston Med. and Surg. Journal, when treating
-on the subject remarks as follows:--
-
-“The pernicious and debasing practice of MASTURBATION is a more common
-and extensive evil with youth of both sexes, than is usually supposed.
-The influence of this habit upon both mind and body, severe as it has
-been considered, and greatly as it has been deprecated, is altogether
-more prejudicial than the public, and, as is believed, even the medical
-profession, are aware.
-
-“A great number of the evils which come upon the young at and after the
-age of puberty, arise from _masturbation_, persisted in, so as to waste
-the vital energies and enervate the physical and mental powers of man.
-Not less does it sap the foundation of moral principles, and blast the
-first budding of manly and honorable feelings which were exhibiting
-themselves in the opening character of the young.
-
-“Many of the weaknesses commonly attributed to growth and the changes
-in the habit by the important transformation from adolescence to
-manhood, are justly referable to this practice.
-
-“This change requires all the energy of the system, greatly increased
-as it is at this period of life, which if undisturbed will bring about
-a vigorous and healthy condition of both the mental and physical powers.
-
-“If masturbation be commenced at this period, it cannot fail to
-interrupt essentially this important process; and if continued, will
-inevitably impress imbecility on the constitution, not less apparent in
-the body than the mind, preventing, as it will not fail to do, the full
-development of the powers of both.
-
-“The individual becomes feeble, is unable to labor with accustomed
-vigor, or to apply his mind to study; his step is tardy and weak, he is
-dull, irresolute, engages in his sports with less energy than usual,
-and avoids social intercourse; when at rest he instinctively assumes
-a lolling or recumbent posture, and if at labor or at his games takes
-every opportunity to lie down or sit in a bent and curved position.
-The cause of these infirmities is _often_ unknown to the subject of
-them, and _more generally_ to the friends; and to labor, or study, or
-growth, is attributed all the evils which arise from the practice of
-this secret vice, which if persisted in will hardly fail to result in
-irremediable disease or hopeless idiocy. The natural consequence of
-indulgence in this, as in most other vices, is an increased propensity
-to them. This is particularly true of masturbation. In my intercourse
-with this unfortunate class of individuals, I have found a large
-proportion of them wholly ignorant of the causes of their complaints,
-and if not too far gone the abandonment of the habit has, after awhile,
-removed all the symptoms and resulted in confirmed health.
-
-“One young man, now under my care, was first arrested in his career
-by reading the chapters on the subject in the Young Man’s Guide. For
-many months, he has totally abstained from the practice, and yet he
-is feeble, depressed, irresolute, and unable to fix his attention to
-any subject, or to pursue any active employment. But he is steadily
-convalescing, and will doubtless recover.
-
-“If the symptoms above enumerated do not lead in any way to a
-discontinuance of the habit, other symptoms more formidable, and more
-difficult of cure, will present themselves. The back becomes lame and
-weak, the limbs tremble, the digestion is disturbed, and costiveness
-or diarrhœa, or an alternation of them, take place. The head becomes
-painful--the heart palpitates--the respiration is easily hurried--the
-mind is depressed and gloomy--the temper becomes irritable--the sleep
-disturbed, and is attended by lascivious dreams, and not unfrequently
-nocturnal pollutions. With these symptoms the pulse becomes small, the
-extremities cold and damp; the countenance is downcast, the eye without
-natural lustre; shamefacedness is apparent, as if the unfortunate
-victim was conscious of his degraded condition.
-
-“The stomach often rejects food, and is affected with acidity, and
-loathing; the nervous system becomes highly irritable; neuralgia, tabes
-dorsalis, pulmonary consumption, or fatal marasmus, terminate the
-suffering, or else insanity and deplorable idiocy are the fatal result.
-Long before such an event, the mind is enfeebled, the memory impaired,
-and the power of fixing the attention wholly lost. These are symptoms
-which should awaken our attention to the danger of the case, and which
-should induce us to sound the alarm, and if possible arrest the victim
-from the inevitable consequences of persisting in the habit.
-
-“In females, leucorrhœa is often induced by masturbation, and I doubt
-not incontinence of urine, stranguary, prolapsus uteri, disease of the
-clitoris, and many other diseases, both local and general, which have
-been attributed to other causes.
-
-“It is often difficult to obtain information on the subject of
-masturbation. Where it is suspected by the physician, the friends are
-wholly ignorant on the subject, and the individual, suffering, is not
-ready to acknowledge a practice which he is conscious is filthy in the
-extreme, although he may have had no suspicions of its deleterious
-influence upon his health.
-
-“It is not sufficient that we know the consequences of masturbation,
-for these are often irremediable disease; we ought to know the symptoms
-of its commencement, of the incipient stages of those diseases which
-result from it, as well as the influence which the moderate practice of
-it will have upon the physical and mental stamina of the man--for it is
-not too much to say that the practice cannot be followed by either sex,
-even in a moderate way, without injury, especially by the young.
-
-“Nature designs that this drain upon the system should be reserved
-to mature age, and even then that it be made but sparingly. Sturdy
-manhood, in all its vigor, loses its energy and bends under the too
-frequent expenditure of this important secretion; and no age or
-condition will protect a man from the danger of unlimited indulgence,
-legally and naturally exercised.
-
-“In the young, however, its influence is much more seriously felt; and
-even those who have indulged so cautiously as not to break down the
-health or the mind, cannot know how much their physical energy, mental
-vigor, or moral purity, have been affected by the indulgence.
-
-“_Nothing short of total abstinence can save those who have become
-the victims of it._ In this indulgence, no half way course will ever
-subdue the disease, or remove the effect of the habit from the system.
-Total abstinence is the only remedy. If the constitution is not
-fatally impaired--if organic disease has not taken place, this remedy
-will prove effectual, and must be adopted, especially in all cases in
-which the effects are visible, or the consequences cannot fail to be
-ultimately fatal.
-
-“This means of cure may be seconded by others, which may be found
-necessary to remove the effects upon the physical system. Suffice
-it to remark here, that total abstinence, in an aggravated form of
-masturbation, is not easily effected. Slight irritation will produce
-an expenditure of the secretion quite involuntary, and spontaneous
-emissions and nocturnal pollution may for a long time prolong the
-danger, and prevent that renovation of the powers which would
-otherwise be the result of the good resolution of the victim of the
-habit.
-
-“No cause is more influential in producing insanity, and, in a special
-manner, perpetuating the disease, than masturbation. The records of the
-institutions give an appalling catalogue of cases attributed to this
-cause; and yet such records do not show nearly all the cases which are
-justly ascribable to it. For it is so obscure, and so secret in its
-operation, that the friends in almost all cases are wholly ignorant of
-it. It is in a few cases only, where the practice of the vice becomes
-shamefully notorious, that friends are willing to allow its agency
-in the production of any disease, particularly insanity; and yet no
-cause operates more directly upon the mind and the feeling. The mental
-energies are prostrated by the habit in innumerable cases, long before
-the delusions of insanity appear. Indeed there are many cases, in
-which insanity does not intervene between the incipient stages of that
-mental and physical imbecility, which comes early upon the victim of
-masturbation, and the most deplorable and hopeless idiocy, in which it
-frequently results.
-
-“This is perhaps peculiar to this cause of idiocy. I know of no other
-which does not produce the ravings and illusions of insanity, or the
-gloomy musings, agitations and alarms of melancholy, before the mind is
-lost in idiotism. But the victim of masturbation passes from one degree
-of imbecility to another, till all the powers of the system, mental,
-physical and moral, are blotted out forever!
-
-“This is not, however, always the case. In some individuals there is
-all the raving of the most furious mania, or the deep and cruel torture
-of hapless melancholy, before the mind is obliterated and the energies
-of the system forever prostrated.
-
-“There are other circumstances attending the insanity from
-masturbation, which render this the most distressing form of mental
-disease. I allude to the difficulty of breaking up the habit while
-laboring under this malady. When insanity is once produced by it, it
-is nearly hopeless, because the cause of disease is redoubled and
-generally perpetuated. The libidinous desires are greatly increased,
-and the influence of self restraint cannot be brought sufficiently
-into action to prevent the constant, daily, and I might say almost
-hourly recurrence of the practice. Thus the cause is perpetuated; and
-in spite of every effort, the disease increases, the powers of body
-and mind fail together, and are lost in the most deplorable, hopeless,
-disgusting fatuity! And yet the practice is not abandoned. All the
-remaining energies of animal life seem to be concentrated in these
-organs, and all the remaining power of gratification left is in the
-exercise of this no longer secret, but loathsome and beastly habit.
-
-“Those cases of insanity arising from other known causes, in which
-masturbation is a symptom, are rendered more hopeless by this
-circumstance. It is a counteracting influence to all the means of cure
-employed, either moral or medicinal, and coinciding as it does with
-whatever other causes may have had an agency in producing disease,
-renders the case almost hopeless. Of the number of the insane that
-have come under the observation of the writer (and that number is not
-small,) few, very few have recovered, who have been in the habit of
-this evil practice; and still fewer, I might say almost none, have
-recovered, in which insanity or idiocy has followed the train of
-symptoms enumerated in a former paper, indicating the presence of the
-habit, and its debilitating influence upon the minds and bodies of the
-young.
-
-“Most of the cases of insanity from this cause commence early in life;
-even confirmed and hopeless idiocy has been the melancholy consequence,
-before the victim had reached his twentieth year.
-
-“Of eighty males, insane, that have come under the observation of the
-writer, and who have been particularly examined and watched, with
-reference to ascertaining the proportion that practised masturbation,
-something more than a quarter were found to practise it; and in about
-10 per cent., a large proportion of which are idiotic, the disease is
-supposed to have arisen from this cause.
-
-“Would it be believed, if it should be said that the proportion will
-not vary essentially in the other sex? On a former occasion I observed
-that the absolute abandonment of the practice, even in those whose
-minds were unaffected by insanity, was not always easily effected.
-If no _voluntary_ practice is continued, the habit may be so far
-established, and the susceptibility to the complaint be so great,
-that slight irritation will produce it, and that often for a long
-time after the danger is fully appreciated, and the victory over the
-propensity achieved so far as cautiously avoiding known and intentional
-indulgence. Nocturnal pollution and involuntary emissions come from
-slight causes and trifling irritation, but perpetuate for a long time
-all the train of unhappy influences that have been heretofore detailed.
-The unfortunate subject of this detestable vice, whose mental energy
-is unimpaired, and whose moral feelings are susceptible of impression,
-can be persuaded to abandon it, if the danger is set before him in its
-true light; but hundreds can bear me testimony that the effects of
-it are long felt, and the involuntary excitement produced by dreams,
-lascivious companions, warm beds, and improper intercourse with corrupt
-society, has for a long time after had its influence in retarding
-complete recovery to health. With the insane we can have no such hopes,
-and no such prospects of cure. They will rarely form resolutions on
-the subject, and still more rarely adhere to them. Reason, the balance
-wheel of the mind, being denied them, they are obnoxious to the
-influence of all the propensities in a high degree.
-
-“After the practice of masturbation, as a voluntary habit, is entirely
-suspended, long and persevering efforts will be required to remove
-the effects from the system, and restore it to vigor and soundness.
-The individual himself must exercise great self-denial, and resolve
-to persevere with the means and overcome all obstacles that may be
-in his way, however formidable and difficult. The regimen to be
-adopted must be strictly adhered to on all occasions. As the inebriate
-would probably never conquer his appetite for alcoholic drink if he
-indulged once a month only--so in this habit, the occasional indulgence
-will thwart the whole plan of cure. The diet should be simple and
-nutritious; the exercise should be moderate and gentle; indulgence
-in bed should not be allowed, and the individual should always sleep
-alone. A mattress is better than a soft bed. He should rise immediately
-upon waking, and never retire till the disposition to sleep comes
-strongly upon him. The cold bath is a valuable remedy; a sea bath is
-better, and the shower bath often superior to either.
-
-“Narcotics, if there is a high degree of irritability in the system,
-are valuable remedies, of which conium, belladonna, hyoscyamus, nux
-vomica, and opium, may be used under different circumstances, combined
-or singly, according to the effects. Blisters and issues on the pudenda
-or perineum, promise well, and the different preparations of bark and
-iron, and other mineral tonics, should be used till all the effects of
-the habit are removed, till the propensity is fully conquered, and the
-constitution is restored to health and vigor.”
-
-Among the cases which occurred in the practice of this gentleman, are
-the following:--
-
-“A respectable young gentleman, of one of the learned professions,
-was out of health for a long period; his head and eyes suffered
-exceedingly, and he was in a state little short of insanity. He
-placed himself under the care of one of the most eminent men in the
-metropolis, and followed his prescriptions a year, but without benefit.
-He then called upon another, who asked him whether he was addicted to
-masturbation, to which he answered in the affirmative. The advice given
-him was principally to abstain from the indulgence, and his health
-gradually improved, and is now re-established.
-
-“B. D., aged 20, had had ill health for a year or more; he was pale,
-feeble, nervous--lost his resolution--had no appetite--took to his
-bed most of the time, and became dull, almost speechless, and wholly
-abstracted and melancholy. His brother was his physician; but not
-ascertaining the cause of his symptoms, he gained no advantage over
-the disease, and the unhappy young man was constantly losing strength
-and flesh. After a while he came under the care of the writer. He
-was in the most miserable condition conceivable; emaciated, feeble,
-pallid--had night sweats, diarrhœa, or costiveness, total loathing
-of all food; his heart beat, his head was painful, and he felt no
-desire, and would make no effort, to live. Suspecting masturbation, I
-found, upon strict inquiry and watching, that my suspicions were well
-founded. I pointed out the danger of the practice, assured him that it
-was the cause of all his sufferings, and that he might be restored to
-usefulness and health again if he would strictly adhere to the course
-prescribed for him. He took bark and iron alternately for a long time,
-pursued a course of gentle exercise and invigorating diet, and gave up
-at once the vicious indulgence. After a long time he wholly recovered,
-and is now a healthy and valuable citizen.
-
-“P. W., aged 27, called for advice in the summer of 1834, having had
-ill health for some eighteen months or two years. He complained of
-confusion of the head and pain in the eyes, indigestion, palpitation of
-the heart, and difficulty of respiration. His sleep was disturbed, his
-temper irritable, and he felt dissatisfied with himself, and greatly
-inclined to gloom and melancholy. He complained of listlessness and
-indisposition to any bodily efforts, and of inability to fix his mind
-upon any subject, or give his attention to any business. His hands
-were cold, countenance pale and dejected, pulse frequent, and his
-whole system in a state of great irritation. It was ascertained that
-for two or three years he had been in the daily habit of masturbation.
-For eight or nine months last past, he has discontinued it; he is,
-however, occasionally subject to nocturnal emission, which has thus
-far interfered with his recovery; but he is better, and under the use
-of tonic remedies, exercise and generous diet, feels confident of
-recovery, having regained his spirits and appetite.
-
-“H. F., aged 20, was for a long time in the habit of masturbation.
-He was for years confined to the house, and much of the time to his
-bed. By long indulgence the habit had become irresistible, and the
-consequences truly deplorable. His mind was as fickle and capricious
-as that of an infant, and his health was wholly prostrated. For five
-or six years he was the most wretched being imaginable. Nocturnal
-pollutions, spontaneous emission, and all the evils resulting from
-unrestrained indulgence, were presented in this truly unhappy young
-man. He had been apprized of the danger which the continued practice
-would bring upon him, and was sensible that all his trials had their
-origin in this vice; and yet the propensity had become so strong that
-he could not resist it, and if he did, the consequences had become
-such that little benefit was derived from his good resolution. In his
-intercourse with his friends he was covered with shame and confusion,
-and seemed to feel conscious that every individual that he met with
-knew, as well as himself, the height and the depth of his degradation.
-In this condition, in a fit of desperation, he attempted to emasculate
-himself, but succeeded in removing one testicle only. After he
-recovered from the dangerous wound which he inflicted, he began to get
-better, and after two years he recovered his health and spirits. He has
-since, at the age of 45, _married_ a very clever woman, and they live
-in peace and harmony.
-
-H. ----, a young man 20 years of age, had been feeble and dejected
-for two years. He was pale, torpid, irresolute, and shamefaced in the
-extreme--so much so, that I could not catch his eye during a sitting of
-an hour. He complained of his head, of short breathing and palpitation
-of the heart, and of extreme debility. His extremities were cold
-and damp, his muscular system remarkably flabby, and his snail-like
-motions evinced great loss of muscular strength. His father, who
-accompanied the young man, said that he had consulted many physicians
-without benefit. The moment that he came into my room I was strongly
-impressed that he was the victim of this solitary vice. I questioned
-him sometime without ascertaining the cause of disease. His father
-was wholly ignorant, and the physicians had not suspected it, or
-inquired concerning it. I requested a private interview--told him the
-danger of such habits, the importance of ascertaining the true cause of
-disease, and my suspicions that he was in this habit, and that if so,
-he would soon fall a victim to its influence. He then acknowledged that
-he was in the daily practice of masturbation, and had been for three
-years--that he often also had spontaneous emission, &c. He had never
-suspected that it had any influence upon his health.
-
-“The symptoms which follow masturbation, viz. nocturnal pollution and
-spontaneous emission, often continue after the victim of the vice is
-made sensible of the danger of voluntary indulgence. These require
-distinct and separate consideration. In some cases they become very
-obstinate; and in spite of every effort, continue to make such a waste
-of vital energies as to prevent a recovery of the health--and the
-new form of disease continuing, the same fatal results follow which
-take place from a continuance of the habit. The local irritability
-of the organs of generation often become so great, that the ordinary
-evacuations of the bowels and the bladder produce an emission; and
-even lascivious ideas, riding on horseback, or other equally slight
-irritation, has the same effect. Such cases require the utmost care, to
-afford any chance of recovery.
-
-“In addition to the common remedies prescribed for the effects of
-masturbation--as bark, iron, silver, the cold bath and shower bath,
-&c., which are valuable remedies for this local, as well as for the
-general debility attending the habit--other remedies, of a more
-stimulating character, and that have a more direct local effect upon
-these organs, are also indicated. Of these, tincture of lytta, bals.
-copaiva, and nitrate of silver, may be named. The strong tinct. of
-lytta, (made of pulv. lytta, 10 oz. alcohol, lbj.) may be taken in
-doses of from 10 to 20 drops, increasing, so as to produce a slight
-irritation of the urethra, and continued in such doses as will keep
-up this effect without occasioning actual pain. The dose should be
-repeated three or four times a day, generally. The very best effects
-often result from the use of this remedy.
-
-“Balsam of copaiva, if the urethra is irritable, may be a valuable
-remedy. Nitrate of silver is also both useful as a general remedy, and
-as having some local action on these organs. From one to four grains
-may be taken daily, combined with a little opium, to prevent irritation
-of the stomach and bowels.
-
-“In leucorrhœa, which too frequently arises from this cause, these
-remedies promise much; and when prescribed in efficient doses, often
-effect a cure, whatever may have been the cause of the disease. It is
-not too much to say, that no one cause more frequently affects the
-health of females, and lays the foundation of fatal disease, than
-severe and long continued leucorrhœa; and yet, if attended to early,
-it is easily cured. It ought, however, even if slight, never to be
-neglected.”
-
-Many cases similar in character to those already stated, and confirming
-the foregoing observations, have been transmitted to us by Dr. A.
-Sidney Doane, and Prof. J. W. Francis, both of New York. Our limits,
-however, forbid their insertion.
-
-
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[1] The injection into the rectum of a strong decoction of pomegranate
-root will destroy these ascarides. These injections should be repeated
-noon and night, and in five or six days the end is attained. Should
-these animals be found in the vagina, the same decoction should be used.
-
-[2] This learned work is dedicated to the Bishop of Lubeck, and has
-this motto:--
-
- “Delicias pariunt veneri audelia flagra
- Dum nocet, illa juvat: dum juvet, ecce nocet.”
-
-
-[Transcriber’s Note:
-
-Renumbered sections to match “Table of Contents”, reformatted section
-headers for consistency.
-
-Page 50, Changed “CHAPTER II” to read “CHAPTER III”.
-
-Page 133, Changed unattested word “prepatialis” to read “praeputialis”.
-
-Page 200, Changed two instances of unattested word “crysorchides” to
-read “cryptorchides”.]
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of A Treatise on the Diseases Produced By
-Onanism, Masturbation, Self-Pollution,, by Léopold Deslandes
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-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of A Treatise on the Diseases Produced By
-Onanism, Masturbation, Self-Pollution,, by Léopold Deslandes
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
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-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: A Treatise on the Diseases Produced By Onanism, Masturbation, Self-Pollution, and other excesses.
-
-Author: Léopold Deslandes
-
-Release Date: May 13, 2017 [EBook #54713]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
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-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A TREATISE ON THE DISEASES ***
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-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_1">1</span></p>
-
-<h1>
-<small>A</small><br />
-
-<span class="x-large">TREATISE ON THE DISEASES</span><br />
-
-<small>PRODUCED BY</small><br />
-
-ONANISM, MASTURBATION,
-SELF-POLLUTION,<br />
-
-<span class="x-large">AND OTHER EXCESSES.</span><br />
-
-<small>BY</small><br />
-
-<span class="x-large">L. DESLANDES, M. D.,</span><br />
-
-<span class="medium table">MEMBER OF THE ROYAL ACADEMY OF MEDICINE AT PARIS,<br />
-AND OTHER LEARNED SOCIETIES.</span><br />
-
-<span class="large">TRANSLATED FROM THE FRENCH,</span><br />
-
-<span class="x-large">WITH MANY ADDITIONS.</span><br />
-
-<span class="antiqua">Second Edition.</span><br />
-
-<span class="x-large">BOSTON:</span><br />
-
-<span class="large table">OTIS, BROADERS, AND COMPANY.<br />
-1839.</span>
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_2">2</span></h1>
-
-<p class="table tdc">
-<span class="trow">Entered, according to an Act of Congress, in the year 1838, by</span>
-<span class="trow">OTIS, BROADERS &amp; COMPANY,</span>
-<span class="trow">In the Clerk’s Office of the District Court of Massachusetts.</span>
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_3">3</span></p>
-
-<h2 id="PREFACE">PREFACE.</h2>
-
-<p>To those who would complain of the publication
-of a work upon the delicate subject to which
-the following pages refer, we would remark, that
-the evil here depicted, is one of great magnitude.
-This cause of disease is often entirely overlooked
-even by medical men, either from false notions
-of delicacy, or because their attention has not
-been drawn by fearful experience to cases which
-are ascribable merely to onanism. The patient
-is unconscious of his danger, and perseveres in
-his vicious habit&mdash;the physician treats him symptomatically,
-and death soon closes the scene.
-“Many a young man,” remarked a physician,
-who had seen much of disease from this cause,
-“many a one has come to me, totally unconscious
-that his criminal act was sapping to the very
-foundation his health and strength.”</p>
-
-<p>To call the attention of medical men to this
-source of disease, and to point out to such persons
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_4">4</span>
-not of the profession as may meet with this
-book, and who indulge in this habit, the fatal
-precipice to which they wend their way, has
-been the object of publishing it here. How
-very many cases of consumption, that disease
-which annually destroys its thousands, could, if
-the truth were known, be referred to this cause!
-How many minds have been ruined by self-indulgence!</p>
-
-<p>If any apology were needed for this publication,
-it may be found in the last annual report
-of the State Lunatic Asylum of Massachusetts,
-which states that of the number of insane received
-at that institution during the last year, no less
-than <small>THIRTY-TWO</small> lost their senses from this
-cause.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">5</span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CONTENTS">CONTENTS.</h2>
-
-<table>
- <tr>
- <th colspan="2"><a href="#PART_FIRST">PART I.<br />EFFECTS OF VENEREAL EXCESSES.</a></th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2"><a href="#PART_I_CHAPTER_I"><span class="smcap">Chapter 1. Danger attending venereal excesses.</span></a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td />
- <td><a href="#Power_of_the_genital_organs_when_at_rest">&sect; 1. Power of the genital organs when at rest.</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td />
- <td><a href="#Power_of_the_genital_organs_when_excited">&sect; 2. Power of the genital organs when excited.</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td />
- <td><a href="#Power_of_the_genital_organs_when_in_action">&sect; 3. Power of the genital organs when in action.</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2"><a href="#PART_I_CHAPTER_II"><span class="smcap">Chapter 2. Circumstances which render the act of venery more or less injurious to the constitution and to the health.</span></a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td />
- <td><a href="#Circumstances_connected_with_the_act">&sect; 1. Circumstances connected with the act of venery which render it more or less injurious.</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td />
- <td><a href="#Circumstances_foreign_to_the_act">&sect; 2. Circumstances foreign to the act of venery which render it more or less injurious.</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td />
- <td><a href="#Influence_which_the_general_state">&sect; 3. Influence which the general state of the functions at different <small>AGES</small> and the particular state of some of them at different periods of life, may have on the consequences of the act of venery.</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2"><a href="#PART_I_CHAPTER_III"><span class="smcap">Chapter 3. Symptoms and diseases resulting from venereal excesses.</span></a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td />
- <td><a href="#General_symptoms_of_venereal_excesses">&sect; 1. General symptoms of venereal excesses.</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td />
- <td><a href="#Diseases_resulting_from_venereal_excesses">&sect; 2. Diseases resulting from venereal excesses.</a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">6</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <th colspan="2"><a href="#PART_SECOND">PART II.<br />RULES OF PRESERVATION AND TREATMENT RELATIVE TO VENEREAL EXCESSES.</a></th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2"><a href="#PART_II_CHAPTER_I"><span class="smcap">Chapter 1. Means of preservation with reference to venereal excesses.</span></a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td />
- <td><a href="#First_indication">&sect; 1. First indication. To prevent the desire of onanism.</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td />
- <td><a href="#Second_indication">&sect; 2. Second indication. To resist the desire of onanism.</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td />
- <td><a href="#Third_indication">&sect; 3. Third indication. To take away from those who wish to masturbate the power of doing so.</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2"><a href="#PART_II_CHAPTER_II"><span class="smcap">Chapter 2. Mode of repairing the injury arising from venereal excesses.</span></a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">7</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="xx-large"><span class="medium">OF</span><br />
-
-ONANISM<br />
-
-<span class="medium">AND</span><br />
-
-<span class="x-large">OTHER ABUSES.</span></h2>
-
-<h2 id="PART_FIRST">PART FIRST.<br />
-
-<span class="medium">EFFECTS OF EXCESS IN VENERY.</span></h2>
-
-<p>Can the power possessed by man of indulging in
-the act of venery be abused? or, in other words, can
-any injury arise to the health or constitution, by indulgence
-in this act. It is sufficient to observe, that
-the affirmative has never been doubted by any author,
-that no medical man has ever been found at any time,
-or in any country, so deficient in intelligence as to
-doubt that venereal enjoyments were attended by venereal
-excess, and no one has ever disputed that masturbation
-or coition may be injurious.</p>
-
-<p>The act of venery, then, may be followed by bad
-effects. But is it so, and to what extent? This question
-is the only one which has been debated, the only one
-to be debated. Let then those, who think that venereal
-indulgences are followed only by the remembrance
-of them, know, that deceived by their desires, and perhaps
-by their necessities, they are rushing blindly toward
-a fatal precipice, which is to be sure at a greater
-or less distance from them, but which however exists,
-and to which those who do not take warning will
-arrive more quickly.</p>
-
-<p>It is generally thought that venereal excesses, particularly
-those of masturbation, contribute in a considerable
-proportion to the ills of suffering humanity.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">8</span>
-Some even consider this cause of disease, as one of
-the most fatal and active. “In my opinion,” says
-R&eacute;veill&eacute;-Parise, “neither the plague, nor war, nor
-small-pox, nor similar diseases, have produced results
-so disastrous to humanity as the pernicious habit of
-onanism: it is the destroying element of civilized societies,
-which is constantly in action, and gradually
-undermines the health of a nation.” (<i>Revue Medicale,
-April</i>, 1828, p. 93.) No one has disputed the
-dangers of this kind of excess. Many authors, however,
-have thought, that writers had exaggerated on
-this subject. Thus Mont&egrave;gre says that “the bad consequences
-(although they do exist) attending premature
-indulgences have <i>sometimes</i> been exaggerated.”
-(<i>Dict. des sc. med.</i> vol. vi. p. 100.) Georget’s opinion
-is similar. According to him, (<i>Physiologie du syst&egrave;me
-nerveux</i> vol. i.) most authors and Tissot among
-others have much exaggerated the effects of masturbation.</p>
-
-<p>It will be seen, with how much reserve these authors
-speak. The injury arising from this habit, say
-they, is very great, but it has been overrated. Let us
-now examine upon what grounds they and others
-have been led to consider these fears as too great:
-we shall see by what reasoning they have been governed,
-and if they are correct.</p>
-
-<p>Mont&egrave;gre was struck by the instances of individuals
-who were addicted to onanism from early childhood,
-and who, however, in the prime of vigour and health,
-had attained an age to which men do not generally
-arrive, or to whom advanced age comes loaded with
-troubles. But do we not see old soldiers who have
-always escaped bullets? Now what do these facts
-prove except that such individuals exist? It has also
-been stated, that influenced with what they have read
-in books, which contain the most formidable cases, as
-those only are printed, many physicians have attributed
-too much importance to the diseases caused by
-onanism. But admitting this, may we not conclude
-also, that many severe affections which it produces
-are not referred to it? That in attending cases of
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">9</span>
-dorsal consumption, epilepsy, paralysis, loss of sight,
-&amp;c., less dangerous diseases are overlooked, and that
-their origin is not suspected? How often, for instance,
-are we ignorant of the true cause of these affections
-whose characters are constantly changing,
-which are seen every day, which at first produce uneasiness,
-but with which one soon becomes familiar;
-which are not the symptoms of a disease having its
-name and place among other diseases, so much as the
-indication of constitutional affections, which appear
-from a variety of influences, and are referred to each
-one of them. And yet this kind of affection, as we
-shall state hereafter, is that presented most frequently
-by individuals addicted but for a short time to onanism,
-who indulge in it but seldom, or whose constitution
-resists this kind of excess.</p>
-
-<p>Appeal has been made also to direct observation;
-the number of those who have fallen victims to onanism
-has been cited. It has been said, call to mind
-every thing which has occurred to you in the course
-of a long practice, you will doubtless find deplorable
-and even numerous instances of the diseases attending
-onanism; but does this number approximate that
-of the individuals who abandon themselves to this
-vice? There are few persons who are not addicted
-to masturbation; very well, are there many whose
-constitutions are impaired and whose health is destroyed?
-It is admitted that premature and too frequent
-and too often repeated indulgences may injure
-and sometimes have caused great detriment, yet those
-who live through them are very numerous, and the
-distance between the use and abuse of the act of
-venery, is greater than is generally admitted.</p>
-
-<p>This manner of counting the dead and wounded
-has something specious in it, but it is defective in this
-respect, that it takes no account of what has escaped
-observation, and cannot be estimated. Every practitioner
-has undoubtedly seen more cases of masturbation
-than he has seen victims to this habit. But
-how many circumstances have prevented him from
-seeing all the diseases which are caused by this habit,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">10</span>
-or have prevented him from referring these diseases to
-their true cause? We have already mentioned the
-influence which his previous reading and occupation
-have on this subject; to this cause of errour, we may
-add others. How numerous are the affections which
-are borne in silence and which never come under the
-notice of a physician. How numerous too the practitioners
-who avoid the trouble of referring to the immediate
-or remote causes of the diseases which are
-observed by them, and who confine themselves simply
-to their treatment, without tracing them to their source.
-How often too are diseases resulting from onanism
-attributed to causes with which they have no connexion,
-to causes which were indicated by persons
-who knew no better, or even by the patient who
-believed himself to be interested in giving wrong
-statements. How frequently also does the practitioner
-exclude himself from obtaining information, by abstaining
-from making suggestions to the parents,
-which all hear with displeasure, and repel with indignation.
-How often, also, does he refrain from asking
-necessary questions, for fear of wounding the modesty
-of the young patient, of teaching him a thing of which
-perhaps he is ignorant, or at least of exciting in him
-a dangerous curiosity! Finally how frequently are
-his doubts removed by the art with which those who
-indulge in onanism, even when young, know how to
-conceal a habit at which they blush in secret. Now
-is it reasonable to expect, that the physician when
-surrounded by so many causes of errour, should go
-into statistical details and estimate from them the
-sum total of the ills produced by onanism and other
-excesses of a similar character? This method would
-undoubtedly lead to taking a part for the whole and
-consequently to forming too narrow an opinion of the
-evil. Many authors having followed this course, and
-having considered the evils which are unobserved by
-them as only imaginary, have not denied the dangers
-and inconveniences of venereal excesses, but have
-supposed that they exist less frequently than is really
-the case.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">11</span></p>
-
-<p>I do not wish to call in question the utility of observations,
-or to pretend that they must be neglected.
-I only wish to say that in attaching to them too much
-consequence we are led to false conclusions which
-may inspire a dangerous security. The physician
-who commits this fault, reasons as does the onanist,
-who being unable to distinguish, either in his comrades
-or in himself, the effects of his pernicious habit,
-concludes that it is an innocent practice and that it
-may be indulged in unreservedly. The principal
-utility of observing the diseases caused by masturbation
-is to determine <i>what are the maladies produced
-by onanism and what is the relative frequency of
-each of them</i>. We can also certainly form an opinion,
-from that which is shown by observation, in
-regard to that which escapes us. But it is only by
-induction, that the extent of the evils caused by venereal
-abuses can be estimated. The bad effects produced
-by these abuses, can be estimated only by considering
-what they may produce. It is only after
-studying the genital system in its relations with other
-organs, and considering the influence it exercises upon
-them, that we can pronounce in regard to the maladies
-and infirmities and dangers of all kinds which
-attend the abuse of the genital system. We proceed
-to this subject first. We shall then state what is
-known from direct observation in regard to the different
-affections which result from venereal excesses.</p>
-
-<h2 id="PART_I_CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I.<br />
-
-<small>OF THE DANGERS WHICH MAY FOLLOW VENEREAL
-EXCESS.</small></h2>
-
-<p>To abuse oneself by onanism, by coition, is to
-abuse the organs which serve for the execution of
-these acts. The genital organs in the female are, the
-vulva, clitoris, vagina, uterus, fallopian tubes and
-ovaries. Those in the male are the penis, the seminal
-passages and the testicles. These organs are then
-placed in such a state that they become a source of
-disorder and of disease to the rest of the body. Now,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">12</span>
-what is their power in this respect? Can they do
-much injury? This is the question now to be examined.</p>
-
-<p>The injury which the genital organs can do to the
-rest of the body when they are abused, is the natural
-consequence of the influence exercised when they are
-not abused! This injury is in a direct ratio with this
-influence; it is by this then that it must be measured.
-In fact, it is clear that if the different organs have in
-the ordinary state different degrees of power, they
-must, when they do injury, exercise it in different degrees.
-Let us then attempt to estimate the influence
-possessed by the genital organs. If it be demonstrated
-that when these organs are in a state of rest, of
-excitement, or in use, their influence on the other
-functions is considerable, some opinion may be formed
-as to what may be their influence when abused. It
-must be admitted that organs, which have a powerful
-effect on all parts of the body, which regulate all the
-others, which cannot feel, act, and perform their functions
-without the others taking part in what takes place
-in them, it must be admitted I say, that when such
-organs are made instruments of disorder, the bad consequences
-which follow may be very great.</p>
-
-<p>The genital organs may be observed in three states;
-the first state is that of <i>rest</i>. They then merely live,
-present no special sensation and do not proceed to the
-act of venery. In the second state they become the
-seat, the focus of more or less vivid sensations, and
-which have for a special character to invite and to
-constrain with more or less power to the act of venery.
-In animals, this state is called <i>rutting</i>: in our
-species, it has no special name, except when existing
-to a very great degree, and then it constitutes a disease,
-termed <i>Satyriasis</i> or <i>nymphomania</i>: I shall call
-it the state of <i>excitement</i>. The third is that of
-<i>action</i>: it is the state in which the genital organs are,
-when they perform their special functions, when they
-accomplish the act of venery. They then do not
-simply live as in the first state, or feel as in the second;
-but they act, and afterward return to one of the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">13</span>
-preceding states, and particularly to the first: they
-rest. These are the three aspects under which we
-shall examine these organs. To render our remarks
-more intelligible, we will give a few definitions. The
-power of bringing the genital organs into a state of
-action is the <i>venereal</i> power: this when put in action
-is the <i>act of venery</i>. If this act results from the concurrence
-of the two sexes, it is <i>coition</i>. If it be
-caused by solitary manipulation, it then receives divers
-names; the terms most used are <i>masturbation</i>, or
-<i>onanism</i>. The act of venery, whether it does or does
-not result from the concurrence of the two sexes may
-or may not be injurious. When it is injurious in any
-degree there is then <i>venereal excess, abuse of the
-genital organs</i>. This sense is the only one attached
-in this book, to this mode of expression: for if in a
-moral and religious point of view the simple fact of
-coition in some cases and of onanism in every case
-be a vice, an excess, an abuse, the physician should
-apply these terms only to cases where the health is
-injured.</p>
-
-<h3 id="Power_of_the_genital_organs_when_at_rest">&sect; 1. <small>INFLUENCE OF THE GENITAL ORGANS CONSIDERED
-IN A STATE OF REST.</small></h3>
-
-<p>It might be thought that when these organs are at
-rest, when they are neither used nor abused, when the
-venereal sense is as it were asleep in them, and they
-seem occupied only with their own development, and
-nutrition, it might seem I say that these organs take
-little or no part in what is going on around them: but
-this is a mistake. We shall see that this dull life
-which then occupies them is sufficient to make them a
-powerful focus of action; that all the other organs
-owe to them a part of their mode of existence their
-form and substance. By this we can judge of what
-the genital system is capable, when excited, and when
-by the hand or otherwise it is brought to the highest
-degree of activity.</p>
-
-<p>Consider him who was born an eunuch, the man
-who has never had genital organs, whose body, mind,
-and heart are developed without their influence:
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">14</span>
-compare him with other men and see in what he is
-deficient: for his physical moral and intellectual relations
-will of course be deficient in all that depends
-on the genital organs. This study will reveal to you
-their power, and will point out to you the difference
-between a man in whose development they have
-assisted, and one in whose development, the genital
-organs have taken no part.</p>
-
-<p>Eunuchs are very seldom tall: they are frequently
-short and sometimes very short. A woman fifty-two
-years old, who had no uterus, and whose genitals were
-presented to the academy of medicine by M. Renaulden,
-was only three and a half feet high. The limbs
-of eunuchs when they are not percolated with white
-fluids, are generally thin and badly developed. Their
-bones have neither their usual size nor form, as has
-been remarked by many observers, particularly by M.
-Mojon of Geneva. (<i>Alibert</i>, <i>Nouv. El. de therapeutique</i>,
-3d edition, vol. ii., p. 115.) This defect in
-growth is much more remarkable in the larynx. This
-organ which generally acquires two-thirds of its size
-at puberty, remains as in infancy, and the voice preserves
-that shrillness which it has in young people,
-but becomes a little stronger because the chest enlarges.
-The different tissues are not only less developed,
-but some are not developed at all. Thus in
-eunuchs the beard and the hairs on the pubis are deficient;
-their skin remains as free from hairs as in
-early youth. The genital organs then have a powerful
-effect on nutrition, because when they are deficient,
-the growth is defective or ceases entirely. This influence
-is manifested also by the characters presented
-by the different tissues after the action of the genital
-parts ceases. To understand these characters, we
-have only to compare the flesh of animals who have
-been castrated with that of those who are perfect;
-for example the flesh of the ox with that of the bull,
-that of the capon with that of the rooster &amp;c. In the
-eunuch these characters are no less marked. His
-organization is in a measure stationary. When an
-adult, he preserves in great part the physical attributes
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">15</span>
-of youth, and then when these are lost, those of old
-age, and not those of manhood, present themselves.
-It is the genital organs then which in a perfect man,
-give colour to the skin, give to the flesh more consistence
-and firmness and which gradually take up from
-the cellular tissue those white fluids, which prevent
-us from seeing the prominences of the bones and
-muscles. The organization of the eunuch is then unfinished,
-imperfect. The organs which should have
-appeared at the period of puberty are not seen: others
-acquire only a part of their growth: all retain a part
-of those characters which they ought properly speaking
-to lose and do not obtain those which belong to
-them. These facts are highly important. The study
-of them demonstrates the extent of the derangement
-caused by venereal excesses: for the organs abused
-by the onanist and libertine, are those which take so
-active and special a part in the internal economy of
-all our tissues: which stamp them with the seal of
-virility, of which the eunuch always remains destitute.</p>
-
-<p>Consider the eunuch now in his life of relation:
-look in him for the thought, activity, and sensibility
-of the man. In these respects also how much he is
-deficient; he is inactive, indifferent, and destitute of
-energy. The lymphatic temperament is marked in
-him by his insensibility, his apathy, no less than by
-the delicacy of his flesh, and the whiteness of his
-skin. He has preserved from infancy the disposition
-given by feebleness, to be excited by the least cause:
-hence he is timid and pusillanimous and cowardly.
-Devoid of any internal feeling which renders the
-soul gay, he is morose and wearisome. He is destitute
-of those feelings which attach man to man and
-render one capable of attachment, love, and devotion.
-He lives, he vegetates only for himself: he is a perfect
-egotist: if he has any sentiments they are those
-of envy or hatred: in fact they are repulsive sentiments:
-but most frequently he has none or they are
-very slight. The crimes of the eunuch come in fact
-less from the sentiments he has, than from those he
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">16</span>
-has not. His mind, like his body and heart, remains
-a perfect waste. His intelligence is but moderate and
-he is never known to conceive or execute great ideas.
-This picture is not drawn from the imagination; it is
-the result of long continued observations at all periods,
-in all places, and upon all kinds of eunuchs. One of
-them observed by M. Bedor embodied in himself the
-principal features of this picture. He was an eunuch
-from birth who had become a conscript. His appearance
-was humble and languishing; his eyes were
-downcast and averted; he was very timid and cowardly,
-was afraid of dead bodies, and of darkness.
-He admitted that he had never been attached even to
-any member of his family: but he was also incapable
-of dislike. He was not pleased with musick, and
-had no idea of singing: finally he was insensible to
-all enjoyment. He did not however complain of his
-situation. His intelligence was very slight, his conversation
-was obscure and incorrect, and he was so
-incapable of being instructed that although he had
-lived in the barracks a year he had none of the moral
-habits of the soldier. (<i>Journal de med. chir. et phar.</i>
-vol. xxv. p. 75.)</p>
-
-<p>Such is the eunuch. The operator in mutilating
-him mutilated his heart, his senses, his mind. The
-development of the moral and intellectual faculties
-then like that of the body is connected with the existence
-of the genital organs. Deprive a child of a
-limb of his four limbs, that is of the half at least of
-his frame, and he will continue to be developed, the
-same as if no part had been taken from him. But
-take away the testicles, and all his tissues, all his
-faculties will bear indelible marks of this mutilation.
-These organs alone then have much more power than
-the four extremities. It is with these, with this power,
-that the onanist trifles from childhood, without hesitation
-and without moderation. Is it necessary now
-to follow this train of reasoning to show that his
-course of conduct is dangerous? It is also to the influence
-exercised by the genital organs on other parts
-that the sexes owe their peculiar differences. Their
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">17</span>
-organization, influenced by a different genital apparatus,
-presents a different mode of existence, action and
-sensation. Thus the sexual characters are slightly
-marked at birth, become distinct as the genital organs
-develope themselves, suddenly enlarge at the period
-of puberty, exist in the greatest degree when these
-parts have come to their perfect state, and lose their
-energy in old age. The destruction of the testicles
-in the male and of the ovaries in the female prevents
-the regular development, or even alters the special
-distinctions of sex. We have already seen that this
-destruction renders man effeminate: we will add that
-it renders the female more masculine, and gives her
-characters, which in the natural order of things belong
-exclusively to the male. This conclusion is drawn
-from facts which seem authentic, and it is strengthened
-too by the fact that when the activity of the
-genitals is destroyed by age, the voice becomes rough,
-resembling that of the male, the upper lip and chin
-are covered with hairs, the moral character acquires
-more firmness, the taste and habits are much modified
-and approximate those of the male. A similar thing
-occurs in animals according to Dumeril. (<i>Dict. des
-sc. med., art. continence</i>, p. 118.)</p>
-
-<p>It is not only by comparing the sexes that we see
-that different genital organs have a different action,
-but it follows also from observing those doubtful
-beings termed <i>hermaphrodites</i>. In these individuals
-the genital organs disturbed in their regular development,
-present doubtful appearances and belong at the
-same time to the two sexes. In these individuals the
-organization being influenced in another manner is
-developed differently. Faithful to these organs which
-generally impress in the body the seal of sex, the
-general state of the body becomes equivocal like them
-and presents a mixture in different proportions of the
-male and female attributes. Thus in a girl whose
-history is stated by Beclard, and who among other
-imperfections of the external genital organs which
-rendered her sex doubtful, presented a complete closure
-of the vulva, and a clitoris so much developed
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">18</span>
-that it resembled a penis, the larynx and voice were
-like those of a youth: the upper lip, the chin and
-cheeks presented a white beard, long and coarse hairs
-covered the lower extremities and surrounded the
-anus; finally the proportions of the trunk and limbs
-and the formation of the pelvis resembled those of
-man. (<i>Bull. de la Facult&eacute; de med.</i> vol. iv. p. 273.)
-It would be easy to refer to similar facts which have
-been frequently recorded. The general state of the
-economy, then, is somewhat connected with that of
-the genital parts, varies like them and takes part in
-the changes which they undergo. Hence it is astonishing
-to see libertines and onanists render themselves
-effeminate, and demoralize their constitution
-by using these parts in such a manner as to fatigue
-and change them: and to observe women robbing
-themselves in the same manner of their beauty, the
-delicacy of their form and the charm of their voice.</p>
-
-<p>When man has attained his perfect development,
-the bonds which unite the genital organs to the rest
-of the body become less apparent and probably less
-intimate than before: they however are not destroyed.
-Castration certainly does not deprive the adult of all
-the characters, of all the faculties which had been developed
-by puberty: but it modifies them very much.
-The beard has been known to come out after the loss
-of the testes as if its existence were connected with
-theirs, as an effect is with its cause. The intellectual
-faculties particularly lose much of their energy, when
-the genital organs are removed. Those persons who
-have been mutilated not unfrequently become melancholy
-and finally commit suicide. (<i>Orfila, Le&ccedil;ons
-de medicine legale</i>, 1823, p. 126.) A remarkable
-case of enervation was observed by Richerand, in
-some soldiers whose testes had been shot away in
-action. Among other cases, he mentions a soldier
-who had previously been celebrated for his activity
-and valor, and who, after his mutilation took an aversion
-to any violent exercise, and to gain his livelihood,
-applied himself to such labours as are carried on by
-females, particularly to sewing gloves. (<i>Richerand,</i>
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">19</span>
-<i>nosographie chirurgicale</i>, 2nd edition, vol. iv. p.
-292.) Compare these facts with what takes place
-when age, that great operator, extinguishes the principle
-of virility. When one is old, is he as affectionate,
-as sensible, as devoted, as intelligent, as he was
-in youth? do not the general characters of an eunuch
-gradually come upon him? The genital organs then,
-even when in repose, regulate in more than one respect
-and at every period of life, the rest of the human
-body.</p>
-
-<p>But it is particularly before and during puberty that
-these organs deserve the most serious attention, for
-then they possess the most power. This power commences
-with them, and like them increases every day.
-Thus the tastes, the characters, the inclinations, and
-generally all which distinguishes the sexes in a moral
-and physical point of view, are marked from infancy.
-That poverty of body of heart and of spirit which
-characterizes eunuchism, is seen in young eunuchs,
-in those for instance who are born destitute of genital
-organs. The soldier whose case is stated by Bedor,
-always presented that indifference and languor common
-to eunuchs; he always avoided all trials of skill
-at wrestling, running, leaping and finally all youthful
-exercises, and as we have already remarked, never exhibited
-attachment to any one, even to his parents.
-The influence of the sexual organs then commences
-with life. But it does not attain all its intensity until
-puberty.</p>
-
-<p>At this period, which in our climate commences
-from the twelfth to the sixteenth year, a little sooner
-in females than in males, the genital organs have the
-most vitality. Until that time they are developed
-slowly and almost imperceptibly; they suddenly increase
-with great activity, and their growth is not
-arrested till they have arrived at perfection. This is
-not the place to enter into details as to the labour which
-then takes place in them: we will merely remark
-that the change is often so intense as to present all
-the characters of inflammation. It is then admissible
-that in such a state these organs should exercise on
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">20</span>
-the economy a much more powerful action than before,
-when their development was imperceptible, and
-also than they do afterward, when they have only to
-preserve themselves. This in fact is proved by observation.
-At no period of life, does the body grow
-as rapidly as during puberty. The researches of
-Quetelet and Villerm&eacute; on the weight and height of
-men at different ages, (<i>Annales &amp;c.</i> p. 26) leave no
-doubt on this subject. Thus the annual increase in
-the weight of the body which until the period of puberty
-was only from three to three and a half pounds,
-suddenly rises to five and six pounds when this period
-commences, and gets to be twelve pounds when it is
-at the summum of intensity. And it is worthy of remark
-that in females who arrive at the age of puberty
-about two years earlier than males, this increase of
-growth also commences two years sooner. A similar
-fact is observed in those monsters who present in early
-infancy traces of virility: in them the mass of the
-body is in a direct ratio with the development of the
-genital system; hence their height and weight are
-enormous. This is proved by a great number of facts
-related by authors and particularly by Moreau, Fages,
-J. G. Smith, Gedike, Meckel, Dupuytren, &amp;c. Let
-us now compare these facts with those pointed out
-when speaking of eunuchism, and it will be shown
-that the power of the genital organs in its nutrition
-follows in its variations those which they experience:
-that the general growth conforms to theirs, that if one
-advances the other does, and if one be imperfect, the
-other is imperfect.</p>
-
-<p>This increase in the activity of the nutritive powers
-during puberty, is not shown simply by the increase
-of the substance of the body, it manifests itself
-by other symptoms. More heat is generated in
-the tissues, as is indicated particularly by the facility
-with which individuals at the age of puberty resist
-cold, and by the interesting remark of Quetelet and
-Smitz, that the summer of all seasons of the year is
-most fatal to them. Ailments of every kind too show
-in most subjects, that the influence of the genital
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">21</span>
-organs on all parts of the body may be so great as
-even to derange the functions: of this character are
-pains, heaviness in the head, vertigos, redness of the
-face, numbness in the limbs, dulness and oppression,
-palpitations of the heart, bleeding from the nose, painful
-engorgements of the lymphatic ganglions, different
-inflammations, &amp;c. &amp;c. Finally the body responds
-like an echo, to all that takes place in the genital
-system. Need we say that nothing of the kind
-takes place in eunuchs.</p>
-
-<p>The active development of the genital parts exercises
-an equal influence on the functions of the life of
-relation, in the faculties of sensation, action, and
-thought. These faculties, which are so feeble in the
-eunuch are extremely active during puberty. This is
-the age of muscular activity and agility. If those
-who are growing up, sometimes are reluctant to take
-exercise, this feeling of reluctance depends on a hyperemia
-of the nervous centres, which soon disappears.
-Numerous different and generally transient
-sensations, denote the part which the nervous system
-takes in what passes in the genital system; and this
-is proved also by the frequency of convulsive and
-spasmodic affections at this period of life. The moral
-susceptibility is then still more exalted than the physical
-susceptibility. The mind directed and controlled
-by the most vivid, most varied, and most transient impressions,
-takes up and lays aside the most opposite
-opinions, and adopts the most hazardous enterprises.
-This disposition has existed to so great a degree as
-even to constitute a kind of monomania, so transient
-as to be almost imperceptible, and during which
-crimes, (particularly that of arson) were committed.
-This fact rests on the authority of Osiander, Henke,
-of the faculty of medicine at Leipsick, of Marc and
-of many other authors. (<i>See Marc’s memoir on incendiary
-monomania, Annales d’hyg.</i> October, 1833.)
-But the mental state resulting from the change of
-puberty is characterized particularly by the readiness
-with which one shares the affections of others, partakes
-of their sympathies, and sympathizes with them.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">22</span>
-This is the moment of generous ideas, or as is remarked
-by those, whose minds no longer feel the
-action of organs which have become mute, the period
-of illusions. How much experience ought not the
-mind to gain when passing through this moral tempest?
-Is it astonishing then to find weak minds and
-cold hearts among eunuchs? Being deprived of these
-organs which at the period of puberty give so marked
-an impulse to the system, they do not feel it: the
-most active of all moral excitants is absent. Judge
-from this of its power, and yet it is this stimulant
-which is so much abused by the onanist.</p>
-
-<p>Let us resume our remarks. We have seen by
-comparing the eunuch to the perfect individual, the
-male to the female, and the hermaphrodites to those
-persons whose genitals are perfect, that the genital
-organs, from the simple fact of their existence, exercise
-a well-marked influence on the physical intellectual
-and moral constitution of individuals. We have also
-seen by comparing the period of life when the genital
-organs are actively developed, with that when they
-are simply preserved, that the influence which has
-been spoken of, is exercised with a variable degree of
-intensity, and is in a direct ratio with the vital activity
-which exists in these organs. We may then state as
-a positive truth, that the genital system modifies extensively
-the action and sensation of all our organs,
-and modifies it in proportion as it is itself excited.
-This fact stated, the question whether venereal excesses
-can or cannot do much injury is resolved. We
-may, <i>&agrave; priori</i>, affirm, that when the genital organs
-pass from a state of repose to that of excitement, and
-from this to a state of action, their influence on the
-other organs is always in an increasing ratio. To
-prove this requires no new facts. This action and
-this progressive increase of power, result, inevitably
-from the comparisons we have made. Life is so mysterious
-and on the other hand, coition is so transient,
-that what takes place in the tissues during its continuance
-is concealed from view: but we may be certain
-that something takes place in them, that some
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">23</span>
-disturbance there occurs and that the disturbance is
-greater during the act of venery than during the preceding
-states. This act then exerts more influence
-than it appears to exert, as it affects all parts of the organization.
-If when the genital system appears at rest,
-it exercises so much influence on the vitality of the
-other organs, what must be its power when the venereal
-sense is excited in it, and further when this sense
-is carried by masturbation or coition to the greatest
-degree of excitement. How much then must these
-secret functions be modified, whose exercise is so intimately
-connected with that of the genital organs!
-Certainly those who say that the possible consequences
-of venereal excesses are exaggerated, have not
-taken this view of the subject.</p>
-
-<h3 id="Power_of_the_genital_organs_when_excited">&sect; 2. <small>POWER OF THE GENITAL ORGANS CONSIDERED IN A
-STATE OF EXCITEMENT.</small></h3>
-
-<p>When these organs are in a state of <i>excitement</i>, they
-present a greater degree of excitement than at any of
-the phases of the state of repose, not even excepting
-that of puberty. We may say that they have passed
-from the chronic to the acute state. They not only become
-the seat of a vivid and special sense, but they also
-present a kind of turgescence of erethism, and I will say
-of very remarkable inflammation. They swell, become
-firm and redder, hotter, and moister: their sensibility
-becomes extreme. Their power ought certainly to be
-increased in proportion to the distance between this
-state and the one of repose. This excitement however
-is so transient, and the functions on which it reacts
-are so mysterious, that a great part of its immediate
-influence cannot be estimated. For in order to mark
-the action of the genital organs on the mode of existence
-on the action of the different tissues we must
-compare individuals to individuals, that is a whole life
-with a whole life, or at least we must compare two long
-portions of the same life. On this point the study of
-the state of repose, of that state which is incomparably
-the most common, has been useful to us, for we have
-arrived at facts, by considering their remote consequences,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">24</span>
-which at the moment of their production, constantly
-escape. The state of excitement however
-does not manifest itself solely by the sensations which
-attend it. Different signs show that the rest of the
-economy feels that the power of the genital organs is
-increased.</p>
-
-<p>In fact when this state is well marked, the heat of
-the other parts of the body is increased. The eyes are
-more brilliant: the colour of the complexion is more
-lively, the pulse is quicker, and the patient experiences
-a kind of febrile agitation which in satyriasis and
-nymphomania, that is, in the greater degrees of human
-venery, presents the characters of a highly marked fever.
-The secretions also undergo important modifications,
-which are but slightly marked in man, but are easily
-recognised in a great number of animals, who exhale
-during the <i>period of heat</i>, a strong and most generally
-a disagreeable odour. The function of nutrition also
-suffers from this state: thus if it appears too frequently,
-or is continued too long, the embonpoint disappears,
-the flesh becomes dry, and the body exhibits
-that leanness which is seen so frequently in those
-who are extremely salacious. But, I repeat, a great
-part of the influence exercised upon the nutritive functions
-by the genital organs when in a state of excitement
-would be overlooked, if only the phenomena
-mentioned were taken into account. In fact these
-phenomena are only those which fall directly under
-the notice of the senses, and we believe that their
-number and proportions would increase infinitely, if
-the observer could directly inspect the tissues closely.</p>
-
-<p>But the most striking fact in the state of excitement
-is the development of a special sense, the <i>venereal</i>
-sense. This fact characterizes this state and it effaces
-the others to such an extent that it seems to form it
-alone. We shall not attempt to describe the genital
-sense: a sense cannot be described. We may however
-ask what is required? Even as hunger impels
-to eat and thirst to drink, this sense impels to the act
-of venery. It is the bond which brings the two sexes
-toward each other, which unites them and which
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">25</span>
-makes, in the words of the disciples of a new belief,
-a perfect individual of the male and female. This
-sense may be only feebly excited, and then may have
-only a moderate degree of power. But when it is
-exalted, the chain with which it binds the free will is
-of incalculable power. The male dreams of the
-female: the latter of the male. One of the opposite
-sex is continually present to the mind and eyes and
-imagination. Individuals and forms which at other
-times appear by no means remarkable, now seem perfect
-and excite transports of admiration. Riches and
-honors are no longer esteemed, and even life itself is
-considered as not worth possessing. All necessities
-have disappeared before one only. Hunger and
-thirst are no longer felt. In fact it is a state of delirium.
-All the senses are concentrated in one: it commands
-them and receives from them, like a blind
-master, all the illusions which they present to it: and
-then fatigued by this violent state and exhausted by
-its excess, even when not satisfied, it is as it were extinguished.
-Such is the power of the genital organs,
-those organs which are abused by the onanist. Who
-then can question the physical evils with which its
-abuse may be attended.</p>
-
-<h3 id="Power_of_the_genital_organs_when_in_action">&sect; 3. <small>POWER OF THE GENITAL ORGANS CONSIDERED IN A
-STATE OF ACTION.</small></h3>
-
-<p>If the individual either by legitimate modes or
-otherwise, wishes to satisfy his desires, the state of
-excitement becomes changed to one of action, and the
-genital organs then arrive at their greatest degree of
-power. All parts of the genital system are interested,
-and combine their actions: the testes prepare the
-semen: the excretory ducts convey it: the prostrate
-gland and the muciparous follicles secrete their special
-humours, and the mucous fluids flow to the sexual
-parts. The erectile tissue, which forms the whole of
-the glans, the cavernous bodies, the clitoris, and most
-of the external and internal labia, the vagina &amp;c., solicits
-to itself and retains the blood, becomes swelled
-by as much as it can contain, hardens and enlarges to
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">26</span>
-the utmost of its capacity. At the same time the genital
-sense passes rapidly through all the degrees of excitement:
-and finally arrives at that point beyond which
-it cannot extend: every muscle, every mature fibre in
-the genital system is then convulsed: the seminal
-vesicles, the muscles surrounding the urethra and
-those which are attached to the anus contract with
-violence, and the semen, the loss of which causes so
-much exhaustion even when discharged involuntarily,
-is convulsively expelled.</p>
-
-<p>The scene now changes: the genital apparatus,
-lately so full of life now becomes flaccid: the scrotum
-becomes loose and pendent, and a sensation of
-torpor, of fatigue, of chill follows. The convulsive
-motions are succeeded by a kind of paralysis, and all
-attempts at new excitement are vain.</p>
-
-<p>During this tumult and after this crisis, the general
-state of the patient conforms in every manner to that
-of the genital system. Thus the face reddens, the
-neck swells, the veins become filled; the skin is now
-burning and now moistened with sweat, the heart
-beats with rapidity; in fact there is a state of fever,
-which almost justifies us in placing the act of venery
-among diseases. At the same time the nervous
-centres, the cerebrum, the cerebellum, the spinal marrow,
-experience a very powerful impression. As the
-state progresses, consciousness is lost, and the subject
-is as it were in a state of delirium. The will is suspended,
-and the muscles are not controlled by it, but by
-the nervous centres which are so much irritated. Thus
-the trunk and limbs are agitated by involuntary motions
-and chills. This disturbance increases until the
-crisis arrives, when the convulsion affects the genital
-system; a fit of epilepsy as it were ensues: the sight
-becomes dim, the trunk stiffens and the neck is thrown
-back: and finally this state might be regarded as a
-violent access of disease if the beginning and end
-of it were not known.</p>
-
-<p>Now however the individual is changed: his face
-has lost its color, his limbs are stiff, without motion
-and as it were paralyzed: the head is painful, the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">27</span>
-mind is slow and the limbs are incapable of the least
-effort. The hearing is dull, the sight is deranged, and
-the external senses impart to the brain only imperfect
-impressions. The pulsations of the heart are feeble,
-the pulse is small, the veins are collapsed and the
-eyelids are livid. The soul is left in a state of languor
-and sadness and becomes as it were melancholy.</p>
-
-<p>This picture although giving the principal points is
-far from being complete; in order to be perfect it
-should include that which is not as well as that which
-is seen. If the simple labor which takes place in the
-genital organs at puberty, is sufficient to modify materially
-the functions of nutrition, functions which
-when deranged give rise to many diseases, what must
-be in this respect the influence of the venereal act,
-and a fortiori of venereal excesses. This influence,
-like that exercised by this act on the nervous system
-cannot be appreciated at the moment it is produced,
-for it is not immediately perceptible. An idea of this
-can be gained only in two modes: one consists in
-measuring the long intervals which exist between a
-state of repose and that of action: we then say that if
-the first can modify to such an extent the texture of
-these organs, their powers of sensation and of action,
-how great must be the power of the second. In this
-manner we reason in this instance.</p>
-
-<p>In the other mode an opinion may be formed by remarking
-the physical alterations and functional disorders
-which have been the consequence of them. This
-kind of proof which we shall soon examine will not
-fail us. We shall then see that the diseases affecting
-the nervous system, that system which is powerfully
-disturbed during coition, are not the only ones
-resulting from venereal excesses. We shall see that
-all alterations of tissue, every physical disorder, may
-be caused by them: and thus we shall complete the
-proof of this fact that the act of venery not only produces
-that convulsive state which is so powerful while
-it continues but that it also exercises on all parts of
-the body an action which is extremely powerful and
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">28</span>
-is also the source of many evils. When we think of
-the power of the act of venery, and consider that it
-may be indulged in as often as an individual chooses,
-and that if the legitimate mode of indulgence, the
-concurrence of the sexes is denied, the individual may
-abuse himself; when we reflect we say on all this, we
-may fearlessly assert that most of the inconveniences
-and diseases afflicting the human species, arise from
-venereal excesses.</p>
-
-<p>We have hitherto considered masturbation and
-coition abstractedly and as if there were no circumstances
-to change the influence they exercise. But is
-this always the case? Are there not individuals who
-are rendered indisposed by a single act of venery?
-Are there not others who can repeat this act with impunity
-at near intervals and for a long period of time?
-Farther is its influence always the same? Are there
-not circumstances which render it more or less injurious
-and dangerous at different periods of life?
-And now what are the circumstances and the causes
-of all the differences we have mentioned? This subject
-will be considered in the next chapter.</p>
-
-<h2 id="PART_I_CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II.<br />
-
-<small>CIRCUMSTANCES WHICH RENDER THE ACT OF VENERY
-MORE OR LESS INJURIOUS TO THE CONSTITUTION
-AND TO THE HEALTH.</small></h2>
-
-<p>These circumstances are of two kinds: some depend
-on the act itself: others are independent of it
-and depend most frequently upon the disposition in
-which the economy is at the moment of its occurrence.
-Let us study in succession these two orders of
-circumstances.</p>
-
-<h3 id="Circumstances_connected_with_the_act">&sect; 1. <small>CIRCUMSTANCES CONNECTED WITH THE ACT OF VENERY
-WHICH RENDER IT MORE OR LESS INJURIOUS.</small></h3>
-
-<p>We have seen in the preceding chapter that the influence
-of these organs is much greater the more
-vivid their excitement is: that, for instance, this influence
-has more intensity during the state of excitement
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">29</span>
-than during that of repose: finally that its greatest
-degree is felt in the act of venery. The natural
-consequence of these facts is that the greater the excitement
-of the genital organs during this act, the
-stronger must be the impression caused by it. We
-may then say that its power of doing injury, other
-things being equal, is in direct ratio with the force and
-duration of the excitement which attends it. And
-further this result is proved by observation.</p>
-
-<p>Compare the two sexes together: the female presents
-instances of venereal excess, much less frequently
-than the male. Whence is this difference?
-Is it not because the genital sense in females is much
-less susceptible of excitement than in males, and
-therefore the act of venery causes them much less
-fatigue? I know that this fact has been disputed:
-and it is asserted that the female is fully as sensual
-as the male; and that if females show their feelings
-less, it is because they are controlled by custom. I
-know also that the reluctance of females to submit to
-the approach of the male is ascribed to a kind of tender
-coquetry which tends to increase the ardor of the
-former. Finally, the redness of the genital organs of
-females during the period of heat, has been mentioned
-as proving the intensity of their sensations. (<i>Marc</i>,
-<i>Dict. des Sc. med.</i>, <i>art. Celib. etc.</i>) But these arguments
-cannot be maintained in opposition to that
-which daily experience proves to be true, viz., that as
-a general fact, females are much less addicted to the
-pleasures of love than males, and experience less
-fatigue during sexual intercourse.</p>
-
-<p>The inferiority or perhaps the advantage which females
-have over males in this respect, depends on the
-passiveness which they naturally exercise in the act
-of generation: and hence their desires are less strong.
-The state of manners justifies their reserve in this respect,
-and points out a physiological fact, or rather
-they are the consequence of it. As to the pretended
-coquetry of animals, I do not believe in it strongly;
-and in regard to that of females I believe that it has
-caused more to err than their desires. If the venereal
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">30</span>
-passion be equally developed in the two sexes, why
-is onanism more common in males than in females,
-notwithstanding certain conditions ought to produce a
-contrary state of things? And farther do not many
-wives yield themselves to the caresses of their husbands,
-without desire and without enjoyment? and
-yet this indifference does not prevent conception, for
-the sensation of love is not with them, as with the
-male, an indispensable condition of the work of generation.
-Finally would there be any prostitutes, if
-coition caused in females the same exhaustion as in
-the male? Females then are indisputably less sensual
-than males; and when this fact is taken in connexion
-with the circumstance that women are less
-frequently victims of venereal excess, does not this
-tend to prove, that, other things being equal, the act
-of venery is, as before stated, less injurious, in proportion,
-as the sensations attending it are less vivid?
-Perhaps this explains why females generally live longer
-by two or three years, than males, notwithstanding
-the pains and dangers of pregnancy, parturition
-and lactation: and this fact may be deduced according
-to Sir John Sinclair, from the registers of mortality
-of different countries, and from the rent tables
-which have been kept in Holland for a hundred and
-twenty-five years. Farther, it is well ascertained that
-every thing which contributes to give more force and
-duration to the sensations attending the act of venery,
-also increases the fatigue and disorder which follow
-it. Coition taken in its simplest sense, and considered
-only as an excretion of semen, undoubtedly causes
-much less injury than if it occurs with other sensations.
-Thus intercourse with public women and
-generally with those who do not excite strong sensations
-is generally attended with less derangement, as
-Hunter has remarked, than if accompanied with violent
-passion. Some authors however as Sanctorius
-and Tissot have advanced a contrary opinion; but
-they have evidently confounded the state of the mind
-with that of the body. When the soul is possessed
-of a violent passion, the ardors of love continue a
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">31</span>
-longer time, are not so soon satisfied: but does it follow
-from this that the body presents more resistance.
-Certainly not, but only that the pernicious effects are
-felt less at the time; although at a later period they
-will be perceived.</p>
-
-<p>One reason why masturbation is more pernicious
-than coition arises from the state of mind during the
-two acts. The onanist, and here we allude only to
-those who have some ideas of sexual intercourse and
-love, having no material object which is the beginning
-and the end of its pleasures, the imagination must
-supply and invent it. This mental labor renders the
-sensations stronger and the body more disposed to feel
-them. Added to these, the onanist is desirous of prolonging
-his feeling, and having under his control certain
-circumstances which in sexual intercourse hasten
-the denouement, he retards it. Thus with fatal skill
-he gives to this destructive vice all the power it can
-possess, and experiences all the evil which this vice
-can cause.</p>
-
-<h3 id="Circumstances_foreign_to_the_act">&sect; 2. <small>CIRCUMSTANCES INDEPENDENT OF THE ACT OF
-VENERY, WHICH RENDER IT MORE OR LESS
-INJURIOUS.</small></h3>
-
-<p>The economy is not equally affected by venereal
-excesses in all individuals at all periods of life.
-There are some circumstances which make it necessary
-for masturbation or coition to be more or less frequently
-repeated in order to be injurious. Hence if
-we wish to know the real influence of these acts,
-these circumstances must be considered. These are
-numerous but they are not all known. Two individuals
-indulge in onanism: one becomes ill in a few
-weeks: but the other resists the pernicious habit longer.
-These two individuals were certainly in different
-states, as the event proves. This fact however
-was indicated previously by no circumstance: their
-age, constitution and manner of living before this
-were similar: in fact the reason why they were affected
-so differently cannot be told. The difference
-here presented by two individuals may be observed in
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">32</span>
-the same person, when considered at different epochs
-and periods of life. He will resist the excess of masturbation
-and coition to a greater degree at some times
-than at others, although the circumstances on which
-these differences depend are not known. There are
-then unknown circumstances which have an effect on
-the consequences arising from onanism. These remarks
-are highly important and seem to be well understood;
-and it is clear that there is no possible security
-for the onanist: in vain does he look for encouragement
-by comparing himself to others, or by
-remarking of a comrade: “if he had been as healthy
-as I am, his health would still be good, he would not
-have died:” or by saying “why should I fear what I
-have indulged in so long with impunity.” This mode
-of reasoning is out of the question when the truth of
-the preceding remark is admitted, and it is then impossible
-for a person to deceive himself; and the reason
-that so many abuse themselves is because they
-think themselves stronger than others.</p>
-
-<p>Besides these circumstances, there are some which
-are well known and which contribute more or less
-to render the act of venery more detrimental. These
-circumstances consist first, in the general state of the
-functions at different ages and in the peculiar state of
-some of them at different <i>periods</i> of life; second, in
-a coincidence of action between the act of venery,
-and other causes of disease; third, in the alterations
-which the constitution may have already suffered, and
-in the disposition existing to contract certain diseases;
-fourth, finally in the state of the diseases with
-which the patient is afflicted, when he indulges in the
-act of venery.</p>
-
-<h3 id="Influence_which_the_general_state">&sect; 3. <small>INFLUENCE WHICH THE GENERAL STATE OF THE FUNCTIONS
-HAS AT DIFFERENT AGES, AND WHICH THE PECULIAR STATE
-OF SOME OF THEM AT DIFFERENT PERIODS OF LIFE MAY
-HAVE ON THE CONSEQUENCES OF THE ACT OF VENERY.</small></h3>
-
-<p>Life is composed of three very distinct periods. In
-the first, the body is developed and formed: it is a
-period of progress: while it continues, the organs
-gain in force and substance: it terminates when they
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">33</span>
-have arrived at their greatest degree of perfection:
-and this generally takes place about the twenty-fifth
-year. During the second period man uses the organs
-as they are formed and constituted. The only process
-which takes place in them is one of reparation, of renewal:
-this is the period of maturity: it generally
-terminates about the fiftieth year. The third period is
-the opposite of the first: it is the period of decline.
-There is, during this latter period, a progressive deterioration
-of the strength and of the tissues. It terminates
-with life. Thus a state of development, that of
-maturity, and that of decline are the three aspects
-under which life presents itself. Let us trace the effect
-of venereal excesses in these different phases of
-action.</p>
-
-<p><i>First period.</i> No animal, and particularly no one of
-the vertebrated animals can procreate on entering the
-world. The genital organs doubtless exist at that
-time, but their form is rudimentary, which proves that
-they are incapable of doing much. These organs do
-not acquire the power of fulfilling their special functions,
-until a more advanced period of life, which
-period varies in different species of animals, but is
-nearly the same in all individuals of the same species.
-Until this time there is no secretion of prolific semen
-in the male, nor creation of ovales in the female: the
-procreative power does not exist.</p>
-
-<p>Man is no exception to this common rule; his genital
-organs, although distinct, are scarcely developed
-at the moment of birth. The penis in males, the
-nymph&aelig; and clitoris in females appear it is true to
-have a certain size, but this size does not depend on
-the development of the true spongy, erectile tissue of
-these parts. The genital apparatus continues to grow,
-although slowly during infancy, but it does not become
-filled for reproduction until after the rapid development
-seen at puberty. Hence in man, as in all animals,
-the power of reproduction does not exist until
-after some portion of life has elapsed. What is this
-portion? why does not the power come earlier or
-later? this is of but little importance: existence is
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">34</span>
-necessary a certain time before it appears. But as
-God has made nothing useless in this world, we may
-fearlessly assert that those who before the age for procreation,
-excite in themselves the feelings attending
-this faculty, do an unnatural act and one which is necessarily
-pernicious.</p>
-
-<p>Thus <i>&agrave; priori</i>, and by the application of general
-laws all premature indulgences are reproved. This
-opinion is confirmed by the study of the human body
-in the first third of its existence. This period of life
-is marked by two facts of the highest importance. It
-is then that the organs form, that they become perfect
-in substance, extent, and texture. It is then also that
-they acquire in action and in the power of receiving
-impressions the characters which form their special
-constitution, that is, the state which considered at the
-same time in all the organs, composes what is called
-the <i>temperament</i>. During Infancy and in youth, the
-formation of the substance of the body and of its constitution,
-is going on. Let us compare with this process,
-on the regularity of which the health, and well-being
-of the individual depends, let us compare, we
-say venereal indulgences, or rather masturbation, for
-this alone is then possible; we shall then see why the
-generative faculty was not born with us, and why the
-precocious excitement of the genital sense is attended
-with so much danger.</p>
-
-<p>The first result of this excitement is to hasten the
-material and sensitive development of the genital organs.
-The preternatural size which masturbation
-gives to the penis in children is so remarkable that
-this alone is often sufficient to reveal this habit.
-Farther this excitement not only awakens the venereal
-sense long before the legitimate period of its appearance,
-but it acquires so much power that the youngest
-persons brave all connective means to satisfy it.
-Here then we have a system of organs forcing their
-development forward at the expense of the other
-organs. This state undoubtedly causes derangement
-and if we compare the genital organs with those
-which have the least sensibility, we may form an
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">35</span>
-opinion of the consequences of it. If we reflect on
-the symptoms attending dentition which are often
-severe; or those depending on too rapid growth of the
-bones, and then measure the great difference between
-the vitality of the osseous and genital systems, we
-can form an idea of the injury caused by the premature
-enlargement of the genital apparatus. Although
-there may be no real disease, yet the wasting of the
-body, the enervation which results from excessive
-growth are often sufficient to give to a young man the
-appearance of an onanist.</p>
-
-<p>If such feelings arise simply from the osseous system,
-what must we expect when onanism, with its
-train of moral and of sensual feelings, forces the genital
-organs to take part in the efforts of growth. The
-power which is then impaired is the same which we
-have seen extend over all parts of the organization,
-that, whose action when regular, contributes so much
-to make each tissue perfect, in fact that which when
-removed gives to man the characters of an eunuch.
-Now consider onanism as possessing this power and
-using to do injury all the energy which it possesses
-to do good; what limits shall be assigned to its injurious
-effects? and yet some authors question them.
-Many general phenomena of puberty also appear prematurely,
-when premature indulgences call them into
-development. Thus the beard appears on the chin,
-the pubis is covered with hairs, the voice assumes a
-deeper tone, and the first indications of virility show
-themselves much earlier than is proper. These symptoms
-serve to trace the aberrations which onanism
-causes in the formation of the organs. This vice too
-does not surely hasten or retard; it deranges: for the
-derangement of the functions is not generally manifested
-by irregularities in formation, aspect, and texture,
-but by material alterations, by diseases. Hence
-why inflammations of all kinds, and numerous organic
-affections result, as observation proves, sooner or
-later from anticipated pleasures: now as the susceptibility
-of the organs varies in individuals, and as in
-one, the heart, in another the lungs, the stomach &amp;c.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">36</span>
-is most liable to be affected, we see why the list of
-diseases caused by onanism, comprises most of those
-which afflict the human body.</p>
-
-<p>Nor is this all; if the excitement of a sense, which
-affects all the other organs, and to which they respond,
-occurs at a time when their mode of action and of
-sensation, or their temperament is not formed, this
-latter varies from what it would be, if developed
-calmly and uninfluenced by this excited sense. Hence
-not only the <i>health</i> but the <i>constitution</i> suffers from
-the too precocious use of the genital organs. He who
-might have attained the age of manhood, with a robust
-temperament by which his body resists numerous
-bad influences by which it is constantly assailed, will
-after indulging in onanism, be exposed to all these influences.
-This vice then compromises both the present
-and future health of the body; the present by the
-diseases with which it is accompanied, and the future
-by those for which it prepares. Hence if the young
-man escapes with life, he is as it were loaded with a
-tribute of ills which he must pay before long and perhaps
-always. Thus the indirect influence of onanism
-in producing human suffering is enormous. I consider
-it even as greater in proportion than that of the
-most immediate consequences of this fatal habit.
-This is confirmed not only by daily observation, but it
-cannot be otherwise. How much then do those deceive
-themselves who seek for the diseases of masturbation
-without believing in their existence, and who
-continue to indulge because they do not see its
-abuses.</p>
-
-<p>If premature indulgence cause so much injury it
-should be one of the most interesting duties of humanity
-to prevent children and young persons from
-abusing themselves, and although the practice of onanism
-cannot be controlled by laws, legislators might
-however fix the age under which marriages could not
-legally take place. We must however admit that circumstances
-connected with the social state of different
-people, with the power of procuring the means of
-subsistence for a family and the necessity of having
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">37</span>
-vigorous children have contributed not a little to fix
-this age. Thus the laws frequently present differences
-which can only be explained by taking into view
-the necessities under which they were passed. Females
-however are allowed to marry much younger
-than males: this depends on two facts, first because
-puberty takes place earlier in females than in males,
-and secondly because the latter require their organization
-to be more advanced to resist the fatigue of generation.</p>
-
-<p>The age at which the venereal power enters into
-full action, and when its exercise is attended with the
-least detriment has been generally determined on two
-distinct grounds: first, the physical aptitude for sexual
-intercourse: second, the general state of the organization.
-The marriageable age has been fixed at
-an earlier or later period according as legislators have
-assumed one or the other of these bases. The first
-served as foundations for the matrimonial laws of the
-Romans: and probably the second served as a guide
-to Lycurgus, who prohibited men from marrying before
-the age of thirty-seven, and to Plato who recommended
-that every child born of a female younger than
-twenty years old or begotten by a man less than thirty
-years, should be branded with infamy. J. J. Rousseau
-too reasons in the same manner: “until the age of
-twenty,” he says, “the body grows and has need of
-all its substance: continence is natural, and if not
-observed it is at the expense of the constitution.”</p>
-
-<p>Although the physical aptitude for coition comes at
-the age of puberty, this fact proves nothing except
-that the genital organs can then be used. It does not
-follow that the genital power is fully developed or
-that the body is in the state most favorable for its use.
-Who would venture to say; that because masturbation
-is practicable in early infancy that it is not more
-injurious than at a later period of life? Hence the
-cause and degree of the evils attendant on premature
-indulgence is to be sought for in the degree of perfection
-of the organism as we have already stated.
-We therefore think ourselves justified in saying that
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">38</span>
-other things being equal the period of life when the
-act of venery is attended with the least trouble, is that
-which begins when the organization is completed, is
-perfected; and as a reverse of this formula, we may
-say, that other things being equal, venereal enjoyments
-anterior to this period, are more detrimental, the less
-perfect the system is.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>perfect state</i> then is the point to which the
-system must arrive, before the act of venery is permitted,
-and before marriage is allowable. There is
-then no longer any fear of disturbing the formative
-process. Look at animals, those at least which are
-not domesticated; they do not indulge in the act of
-reproduction, until they have attained their full vigor,
-and how often too do severe battles take place for a
-female. The domestic animals live in a manner
-which hastens the development of the venereal sense;
-and they often indulge in procreating at an early
-period, but suffer for it, and the genital faculties soon
-become extinct. It seems also to be proved by the researches
-of Hofalker of Inspruch and Girou of Buzaringues,
-that both in man and animals the age of the
-individuals has an influence on the sex and quality of
-the offspring. But why look to animals for proofs?
-Daily observation and the testimony of all authors,
-put beyond all doubt the danger of precocious indulgence.
-There are certainly numerous individuals of
-every age who indulge in venereal excesses; but
-those cases which come under our notice, or whose
-histories are related by authors, are generally those of
-young people. Different causes I know may contribute
-to this result; one of the principal is, that masturbation
-is the act of venery most frequently practised
-before the adult age, and that this is generally
-more pernicious than coition. We have already
-stated one reason for this difference; we may add that
-as onanism does not require the concurrence of the
-sexes, it is more liable on this account to excess. But
-do these causes alone explain why the immediate consequences
-of venereal excesses are not seen with but
-few exceptions except at an early period of life. The
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">39</span>
-enormous disproportion arises from the precocity of
-these excesses, and also from the state of the economy
-before it is perfect.</p>
-
-<p>We have now to determine at what period of life
-the body arrives at its perfect state and the distance
-which separates it from this state at the different ages
-which precede it. This period however is varied by
-many circumstances, and it is far from being the same
-in every individual, in the same country or in the
-same climate. We can then present only mean results,
-deduced from those collected in France which
-are the most numerous and authentic.</p>
-
-<p>As we have already said, the organization of the
-human body is composed of two parts: the development
-of the tissues and that of the constitution. The
-economy then cannot be said to be in a perfect state
-until this double development is finished, and the
-organs have gained all their power and substance.
-Unfortunately the labor of the constitution and its
-progress in activity and in receiving impressions, cannot
-be estimated by positive rules: but it is connected
-so intimately with the development of the body, that
-this can give a sufficiently exact idea of its progress
-and state. We may then simply by a glance at the
-development of texture, fix with a certain degree of
-precision, the value of these words: <i>premature</i> and
-<i>precocious enjoyments</i>.</p>
-
-<p>It would be out of place to examine the different
-organs separately and trace their growth, and in the
-present state of science we cannot give this labor the
-precision necessary to attain our purpose. But there
-is one fact which can be measured, viz., the weight of
-the body. Let us state then the varieties in weight
-presented at different periods of life, as determined
-by Quetelet and Villerm&eacute;.</p>
-
-<p>The mean weight of a male child at birth is three
-kilogrammes and twenty decimetres. Each year its
-weight increases in the following proportion:</p>
-
-<table class="tdc">
- <tr>
- <td>At</td>
- <td>1</td>
- <td>year</td>
- <td>he weighs</td>
- <td>9</td>
- <td>kil.</td>
- <td>45</td>
- <td>dec.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>2</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>11</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>34</td>
- <td>"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>3</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>12</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>47</td>
- <td>"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>4</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>14</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>23</td>
- <td>"<span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">40</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>5</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>15</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>77</td>
- <td>"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>6</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>17</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>74</td>
- <td>"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>7</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>19</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>10</td>
- <td>"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>8</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>20</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>76</td>
- <td>"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>9</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>22</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>64</td>
- <td>"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>10</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>24</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>52</td>
- <td>"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>11</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>27</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>10</td>
- <td>"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>12</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>29</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>82</td>
- <td>"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>13</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>34</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>38</td>
- <td>"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>14</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>38</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>76</td>
- <td>"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>15</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>43</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>62</td>
- <td>"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>16</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>49</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>67</td>
- <td>"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>17</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>52</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>85</td>
- <td>"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>18</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>57</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>85</td>
- <td>"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>19</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>60</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>06</td>
- <td>"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>25</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>62</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>93</td>
- <td>"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>30</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>63</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>95</td>
- <td>"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>40</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>63</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>67</td>
- <td>"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>50</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>64</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>46</td>
- <td>"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>60</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>61</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>94</td>
- <td>"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>70</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>59</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>52</td>
- <td>"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>80</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>57</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>83</td>
- <td>"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>90</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>57</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>83</td>
- <td>"</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>This table shows us that man attains the maximum
-of weight at forty years of age. At this age then we
-may regard the economy as being perfect. Now when
-we consider that persons from twelve to eighteen
-years indulge most frequently in masturbation and
-that this habit may be formed at a very young age, we
-may easily conceive of the ills with which it may be
-attended. This consequence is seen more clearly and
-exactly by the following table. The mean weight of
-man when the organization is complete being sixty-three
-kilogrammes sixty-seven decimetres, at the time
-of birth he has yet to gain sixty kilogrammes forty-seven
-decimetres.</p>
-
-<table class="tdc">
- <tr>
- <td>At</td>
- <td>1</td>
- <td>year old</td>
- <td>54</td>
- <td>kils.</td>
- <td>22</td>
- <td>dec.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>2</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>52</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>33</td>
- <td>"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>3</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>51</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>20</td>
- <td>"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>4</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>49</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>44</td>
- <td>"<span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">41</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>5</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>47</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>90</td>
- <td>"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>6</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>46</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>43</td>
- <td>"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>7</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>44</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>57</td>
- <td>"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>8</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>42</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>91</td>
- <td>"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>9</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>41</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>02</td>
- <td>"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>10</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>39</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>15</td>
- <td>"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>11</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>36</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>57</td>
- <td>"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>12</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>33</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>85</td>
- <td>"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>13</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>29</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>29</td>
- <td>"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>14</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>24</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>91</td>
- <td>"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>15</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>20</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>05</td>
- <td>"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>16</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>14</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>00</td>
- <td>"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>17</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>10</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>82</td>
- <td>"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>18</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>5</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>82</td>
- <td>"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>20</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>3</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>61</td>
- <td>"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>25</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>0</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>74</td>
- <td>"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>30</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>0</td>
- <td>"</td>
- <td>02</td>
- <td>"</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>Hence it will be seen that a man who at the moment
-of birth only possesses about .05 of the growth
-he afterwards attains, will have at most only a quarter
-of his full weight when 5 years old, at which age
-many children begin to indulge in masturbation.
-When ten years of age, he has yet to gain nearly .60
-and nearly .40 of his weight when he has arrived at
-his fourteenth year. When sixteen years old, one
-fifth of his weight is still deficient, and at eighteen
-years nearly one tenth; his growth although nearly
-completed at the age of twenty-five, is not entirely attained,
-since even when thirty years old, the weight
-of the body is capable of a slight increase.</p>
-
-<p><i>Of the effect of venereal excesses when the subject
-of them has attained his growth.</i> The age of
-maturity is the period when venereal pleasures are attended
-with the slightest derangements and dangers.
-At this period these pleasures may not only not be injurious,
-but may even be necessary. This last circumstance
-would be sufficient to distinguish this
-period from those of the growth and decline of the
-body, when these pleasures are never useful. Let it
-not be thought, however, that, at the age of maturity,
-they may be indulged in to excess, or that the pleasures
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">42</span>
-of love are limited only by the power of indulging
-in them, this is a great mistake; abuses are
-less frequent, but they do occur, as is seen both by experience
-and by simple reasoning. Although at the
-age of maturity the body increases but slightly, yet
-the process of nutrition is not arrested. It is true
-that the size and weight of the body no longer increase,
-but its substance is constantly renewed. The
-act of venery may then interfere with and derange as
-before the function of nutrition. The constitution
-also may be affected, and although the regular course
-of its formation may not be deranged, yet it may be
-deteriorated and its influence on the action and sensation
-of the different organs is so great, that if this
-deterioration proceed to any extent, these organs will
-suffer. Thus the health may be injured and the constitution
-impaired in adults, by venereal excesses;
-their influence however is resisted longer. The adult
-age may even present more unfavourable conditions
-for venereal excess than the period of growth. It may
-be attended with diseases transmitted from preceding
-years. In the adult age, the errours of youth are
-atoned for: wretchedness, debauchery, and excesses of
-every kind may leave their mark upon the body. Venereal
-excesses then find the constitution impaired,
-the health deranged, and they increase the evil already
-existing. Those particularly who have indulged in
-masturbation in their youth, perceive on arriving at
-the adult age, that if they wish to taste the pleasures
-of love, even to a moderate extent, they are affected
-with bad feelings which prove that premature indulgences
-must be paid for with interest.</p>
-
-<p>Different circumstances may render the act of venery
-injurious at the adult age, but as these do not
-belong exclusively to this age, we shall speak of them
-hereafter.</p>
-
-<p><i>Of the effect of venereal excesses in the period of
-decline.</i> The faculty of procreating in mankind has
-its limits: as this power is not attained till at a certain
-period of life, so too it continues only for a certain
-period. The spermatic animalcul&aelig;, the microscopic
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">43</span>
-sign of the power of generating, are seen only
-during a portion of human existence: they do not
-appear till puberty, and disappear in advanced life.
-This is true also in regard to all animals: the rule is
-a general one. God has willed that the period of maturity
-should be the only one devoted to love: is it
-not a fair conclusion that those who transgress this
-law expose themselves to its penalties? As the
-sense of venery precedes, so too it may outlive, the
-procreative power; it then excites to indulgence at
-too late a period of life. Examples of this anomaly
-are very common; hence we need not refer for them
-to the works of the old writers, we will merely say
-that a large portion of those committed for attempts
-at rape are old men. Fortunately the venereal sense
-is that which suffers the soonest from excesses; and
-if sometimes the venereal desires are excited, the state
-of the genital organs prevents their indulgence.</p>
-
-<p>Sometimes, however, the case is otherwise: excited
-in different ways the genital organs in old men, may
-for a few moments appear to have regained a faculty
-which they considered to be lost; these imprudent
-persons soon pay dearly for their indiscretion. Let us
-reflect a moment on the state in which venereal pleasures
-find man in his old age. His substance, instead
-of increasing or of continuing sound, wastes away.
-We have seen in a former page, that after the fortieth
-year the weight of the body begins to diminish; the
-tissues also vary in every respect from the perfect
-state as seen at the age of maturity. Farther the sensibility
-is diminished, the vital activity is enfeebled,
-the faculties become enervated, in short the economy
-is impaired. Need we now to make any remarks in
-regard to the most exhausting of human actions to
-show its danger? And yet we have only pictured old
-age as it progresses of its own accord, gently and
-slowly, without being hurried on by any infirmity; but
-this rarely happens.</p>
-
-<p>In speaking of the adult age, I have pointed out the
-affections with which it is attended. But the case is
-worse in old age. All parts of the body have suffered
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">44</span>
-so many attacks, have been so often affected, that
-hardly one of them can be called sound. Hence
-every cause of disease is serious and important, the
-body being as it were ripe for a diseased affection.
-What ought then to be the influence of the act of
-venery? Will it not quicken into life, the seeds of
-disease which are as it were already sown? In fact
-it often has a violent effect on the system, and sudden
-death follows exertions which ought not to be made.
-How many old men have yielded up their existence
-in the nuptial bed, when their term of life might have
-been continued, if they had not exhausted their
-strength in unnatural exertions.</p>
-
-<p>We have said that the peculiar state of some functions
-may render the act of venery more injurious at
-some periods of life than at others. The functions to
-which we alluded, were digestion, menstruation, pregnancy,
-and lactation.</p>
-
-<p>Masturbation and coition are often practised after
-taking food. Sometimes the general excitement attending
-the labor of digestion extends to the genital
-organs, and excites to these acts. We cannot say
-that they are then always injurious: as this would be
-contradicted by facts; but that they frequently are is
-supported by the opinions of all authors, who have
-written on the subject. “Coition after eating,” says
-Sanctorius, “is injurious,” and he attributes the same
-effect to thoughts of venery. His commentator Lorry
-confirms this opinion.</p>
-
-<p>The act of venery during digestion, may injure in
-two modes. First by deranging the digestive system,
-and by exposing it to the affections which are the
-usual consequences of such a derangement. To this
-must be referred most of the derangements usually
-presented by the digestive organs of onanists, who
-merely watch their opportunities for self-pollution,
-without regarding whether digestion is or is not
-finished. Happily vomiting then sometimes rids the
-stomach of food which might be badly digested, and
-thereby cause more disturbance.</p>
-
-<p>The second mode in which the act of venery acts
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">45</span>
-during digestion, is by causing a general state of excitement,
-which adds to that caused by the digestive
-process. All the organs as the heart, lungs, brain,
-&amp;c., are during digestion in a state of hyperemia, of
-congestion; they are crowded with blood, as is indicated
-by a great number of symptoms. It can easily
-be imagined that venereal excitement under such circumstances,
-may become the cause of inflammations
-and organick affections, or may, at least, contribute to
-their development; by increasing also a congestion
-caused by an abundant repast, it may immediately excite
-severe and fatal symptoms. Instances of individuals
-who have died during the act of coition, after
-leaving the dinner-table, are by no means rare. Campet
-states a case where a man on quitting the dinner-table,
-at which he had drank freely, was accosted by
-a public woman, went home with her, and died in her
-arms. A marshal of France a few years since, met
-his death in a similar manner.</p>
-
-<p>The act of venery, if indulged in during the period
-of menstruation, may sometimes derange this function.</p>
-
-<p>The injuries resulting from coition during pregnancy
-have never been doubted; by some, however, too
-much importance and by others too little has been attached
-to this state. Levret attributes most cases of
-abortion, which cannot otherwise be accounted for,
-to this cause. Zimmerman, Gardien, Murat, Dug&egrave;s,
-&amp;c., also regard this act as a frequent cause of miscarriage.
-Different conclusions have been drawn
-from these opinions. Some authors assert, that females
-have a right to deny their husbands during gestation.
-Montaigne is of this opinion. Some natives
-as the Mahometans, repudiate all intercourse with
-pregnant females. In some African tribes, pregnant
-women are secluded, and no one is allowed to have
-intercourse with them. Pallas states that the Calmuck
-Tartars condemn the person, whose incontinence
-has caused abortion, to pay a fine, the amount of
-which is directly in proportion to the age of the
-fetus.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">46</span></p>
-
-<p>The most general opinion however of physicians
-on this subject, is that coition to a moderate extent
-during pregnancy, and where there is no disposition
-to miscarriage, is not generally detrimental: but that
-when this act is repeated imprudently, it may cause
-great excitement in the uterus, and be attended with
-abortion. Continence is particularly recommended to
-nervous females, and must be insisted upon when
-there is reason to fear abortion. We must however
-observe, that venereal excesses have often been indulged
-in during pregnancy with evil intents, but
-without producing the desired result.</p>
-
-<p>Lactation has also been considered by some authors
-as contra indicating the pleasures of love. Children
-it is said have been known to become convulsed, when
-nursing just after their mothers had indulged in
-sexual intercourse. Lascivious nurses have generally
-been regarded as bad. Many mothers, however,
-admit the embraces of their husbands, and their offspring
-does not suffer. We are far from thinking that
-the influence supposed to be exercised by the act of
-venery upon the milk of nurses, is entirely unfounded;
-hence this act should be used with moderation.</p>
-
-<p><i>Influence which the act of venery may have, when
-coincident either with the action of other causes of
-disease, or with alterations in the constitution and
-health.</i> When an individual suddenly changes his
-mode of living, and the influences to which he has
-been exposed, and becomes a subject to new influences,
-his health most generally suffers to a certain extent.
-This is seen in the young man who comes directly
-from the pure air of the country into the confined
-atmosphere of the city, and in those who remove
-from the temperate to the torrid zone. The action of
-powerful causes of disease, of excessive heat, of deleterious
-exhalations, often adds to the simple change
-of habit. Thus all authors who have written on the
-diseases of warm countries, consider the act of venery,
-as one of the most active occasional causes of yellow
-fever, of malignant fevers, of cholera morbus, and
-generally of the severe diseases contracted by Europeans.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">47</span>
-A similar disposition may be seen in young
-men, who pass many hours in the infected atmosphere
-of hospitals, and particularly in dissecting-rooms, if
-they indulge with females or in onanism: typhus
-fevers have been caused by it. The individual who
-lives in a filthy neighbourhood, who experiences privations,
-who indulges to excess in wine or spirituous
-liquors, who labors hard either corporeally or mentally,
-who is deprived of sleep, who is affected with sadness,
-&amp;c., bears the act of venery badly; it adds to
-the enervation already felt, and generally robs the individuals
-of health. Venereal pleasures should be abstained
-from, during the prevalence of epidemics:
-every person is then disposed to the prevailing disease,
-and a single act of coition may produce it.</p>
-
-<p>The influence of the act of venery is much more
-injurious, when the causes which we have mentioned,
-and generally all those which may impair the constitution,
-have affected it to a greater or less degree.
-Diseases of long duration, if badly treated, excesses
-and the causes mentioned above may bring the system
-to such a state, that enjoyments even if seldom
-indulged in, may produce great suffering and disease.
-Venereal excesses may also create predispositions and
-change them as well as those which have a different
-origin into other morbid affections.</p>
-
-<p>It is well known that the venereal desires do not
-generally exist, except the person be in a state of
-health. The same may be said too of the generative
-power, if we may judge from Haller’s remark that
-the spermatic animalcul&aelig; disappear during disease.
-It is ascertained that the number of conceptions is in
-a direct ratio with the degree of health enjoyed by a
-people; they increase in a healthy season, and diminish
-in an unhealthy season. This fact is established
-by the researches of Villerm&eacute; in regard to the births
-and deaths in France, Italy, England and Belgium,
-and also in regard to the marshy parts of France at
-different periods of the year, (<i>Ann. d’hyg. publ.</i>,
-<i>January</i>, 1831.) Thus then the genital sense, like
-that of hunger, and probably the power of procreating,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">48</span>
-like that of digesting, is most generally suspended
-during disease. Is not this one of the many
-warnings of the organization, as to the preservative
-power?</p>
-
-<p>It is true however that individuals indulge in
-coition and masturbation although even in an advanced
-state of disease. This is most frequently seen
-in onanists. “I have seen,” says Pinel, “a person affected
-with a dynamic fever who was entirely exhausted,
-and yet his passion for onanism was so powerful,
-that on the sixth day of the disease he still attempted
-to excite his organs, although death was coming upon
-him.” Similar cases have been witnessed by every
-practitioner, which we shall mention in the course
-of this work. Thus then even a severe disease does
-not entirely prevent the act of venery. Let us now
-inquire what is the effect when such people indulge.
-It must be admitted that this indulgence is at least
-useless, except in very rare cases, where continence
-is the cause of sickness. Strictly speaking, this may
-be the case in certain chronic affections and in some
-few individuals, but it is rare. The power of the act
-of venery is so great, and the diseased organs are
-generally so sensitive to the impressions made on the
-economy, that if there are apparently some diseases
-which seem unaffected by this act, it is because the
-modification which they experience escapes observation.
-We may then state as a general rule that if the
-act of venery be indulged in by sick people, it is injurious
-and generally to a great degree. How great
-is the injury when the disease is caused by venereal
-indulgences.</p>
-
-<p>It often happens that diseases resist to an unaccountable
-extent all remedial agents: suspicion is
-excited and finally we find that the patient, an onanist
-before he was taken sick, has continued to abuse himself
-through his sickness: and again, the symptoms
-of the disease under treatment gradually disappear:
-but the strength does not return, nor does the patient
-become convalescent. Debility increases instead of
-diminishing: the patient becomes thinner and the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">49</span>
-fever continues: finally the sick person falls into a
-consumption and the fatal habit is at last discovered.
-In others the disease seems to be terminated, but is
-suddenly re-excited, the patient being too hasty to indulge
-in masturbation or coition. This happened to a
-man fifty years old, who was gouty, and much addicted
-to the pleasures of the table, and whose case is
-related by Hoffman. Having indulged in coition soon
-after he was convalescent from pleurisy, this man had
-a relapse which was much more dangerous than the
-original illness. The same author states a similar
-case, where the imprudence was followed by death.
-Scrofula, rickets, gout, and stone are says M. Marc,
-diseases, which on arriving at a certain point, are aggravated
-by coition. The same remark applies to
-all other maladies. M. Falret mentions a female
-affected with melancholy at the hospital Salpetri&egrave;re,
-whose mental affection has several times been re-excited
-by onanism, after she was thought to be cured.
-Cutaneous diseases in particular may give an idea of
-the influence exercised by the act of venery on those
-maladies which are deeply situated. Alibert mentions
-the history of an herpetic disease which was always
-more intense after the patient had indulged in onanism:
-this unfortunate individual was then tormented
-by a severe itching.</p>
-
-<p>The irregularity and singularity of the symptoms
-of those sick people who indulge in onanism, are particularly
-remarkable. The nervous system evidently
-feels an influence in addition to that of the disease, or
-is disposed to be particularly affected by all those
-which occur. This fact, established by Tissot and
-Georget, should always be remembered by physicians.
-We may form an idea of the derangement caused by
-the act of venery in the progress and appearance of
-diseases by the severe symptoms which it produces
-in wounds and particularly those of the head. Tetanus,
-delirium, and other nervous symptoms have
-often been caused by it. Fabricius de Hilden states
-the case of a young man whose hand was amputated,
-and whose physician forbid having any intercourse
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">50</span>
-with his wife, who was also informed of the danger.
-But when all the symptoms disappeared, and the cure
-was progressing rapidly, the patient feeling desires to
-which his wife could not respond, procured a seminal
-emission without coition; it was immediately followed
-by fever, delirium, convulsions and other symptoms,
-and in four days the patient died.</p>
-
-<p>Death also often follows coition in patients affected
-with diseases of the heart and large vessels. This
-was seen in the case of Corroy, a servant at the
-hospital la Chardit&eacute;. One evening while intoxicated
-he met a courtezan with whom he proposed spending
-the night, but in the midst of his transports he suddenly
-died. On examining his body it was found that
-he had an aneurism near the commencement of the
-arch of the aorta. The rupture of this tumor was
-evidently the cause of his sudden death. Probably
-also a similar occurrence happened in the case mentioned
-by Felix Plater. The patient having married
-a second time, experienced, while consummating the
-marriage, such a violent degree of suffocation that he
-was forced to suspend his efforts: the same symptom
-re-appeared whenever he again attempted it. Having
-consulted a charlatan, he was recommended to persevere:
-he did so, and died. Examples of sudden
-death during coition are not rare. Death generally
-arises from aneurism or apoplexy. Pliny the naturalist
-mentions two cases, and Tabourdot in his
-<i>Bigarrures</i>, has preserved the epitaphs of several
-who have perished in this manner.</p>
-
-<h2 id="PART_I_CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III.<br />
-
-<small>SYMPTOMS AND DISEASES CAUSED BY VENEREAL
-EXCESSES.</small></h2>
-
-<p>The genital organs when they are abused are precisely
-in the same state as if they were diseased. In
-this case in fact, they are not in their normal state for
-they are in action when the health demands that they
-should rest. Hence when we consider them either
-specially or as to their action on the rest of the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">51</span>
-body, we see that they resemble organs in a morbid
-state; they are, as it were affected with an intermittent
-malady, having distinct periods of access, which
-are repeated more or less frequently, according to the
-acts of the onanist. The local condition of these
-organs is at first that which they present during the
-act of venery, but at a later period they may present
-different alterations, which continue after the periods
-of access, in the same manner as the tissues are modified,
-if the cause which renders them diseased continues
-to act on them. The general state of onanists
-is also perfectly analogous to that observed in diseases.
-In them, the genital organs are the seat of
-different symptoms, and the focus of numerous diseases.
-The symptoms appear first only during the
-periods of access, or for a few hours afterward: then
-they continue longer and the intermissions become
-shorter and afterward are only remissions: finally the
-disease is perfectly continued. This is the usual
-course of the symptoms of this affection which may
-be called the <i>genital</i> disease. Frequently however,
-one of the derangements of the reproductive system,
-assumes, on account of its individual peculiarities a
-more determined character than the others, and becomes
-as it were independent of them. This disorder
-is then no longer a symptom but becomes a disease
-which is in one phthisis, in another myelitis,
-epilepsy, amaurosis &amp;c. So too with a wound; this
-which at first caused only fever and other symptoms
-intimately connected with it, becomes afterward gastroenteritis,
-tetanus, or some other disease which has
-its regular place in systems of nosology. <i>Voluntary
-pollution</i>, when it becomes injurious must then be
-considered as an <i>affection</i> having its symptoms, and
-also as a <i>cause</i> of disease. We shall proceed to consider
-it in these two relations in two different sections.
-The first will be devoted to the symptoms arising
-from this pollution, the second, to the diseases caused
-by it.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">52</span></p>
-
-<h3 id="General_symptoms_of_venereal_excesses">&sect; 1. <small>SPECIAL SYMPTOMS OF VENEREAL EXCESSES.</small></h3>
-
-<p>Before proceeding to describe these symptoms, we
-would remark, 1st that the results of venereal excesses
-are so analogous to those of involuntary pollution,
-that it is impossible to point out any difference
-between them: 2d that the general effects of these
-pollutions, whether voluntary or involuntary, are also
-extremely analogous to those caused by the slow destruction
-of an organ; those for instance observed in
-phthisis pulmonalis, cancer of the uterus, profuse suppurations,
-chronic diarrhœa, &amp;c. Thus then the results
-of masturbation and of coition are the same as
-those of involuntary seminal emissions, which is decidedly
-a disease of the genital organs, and as those of
-other severe maladies affecting different parts. Are
-not these analogies sufficient to prove that we were
-correct in regarding the state in which the genital
-organs are momentarily when abused, as a state of
-disease.</p>
-
-<p>One of the most constant effects of excessive masturbation
-is the loss of flesh. This symptom shows itself
-more or less rapidly, and extends to a greater or
-less degree. We may regard it as one of the circumstances
-in which onanists most resemble those affected
-with phthisis, with diarrhœa, and generally, individuals
-confined with a severe and long continued
-illness. The loss of flesh arising from onanism has
-not unfrequently been attributed to a too precocious
-growth and vice versa. This symptom is much more
-striking in some onanists, as it is attended with excessive
-appetite and a healthy state of the digestive
-organs. How great must be the influence of the genital
-organs when abused, on the nutritive process, to
-cause this loss of flesh, even under the conditions
-most favorable for its gain. It is not uncommon to
-see onanists affected with a complete state of marasmus:
-their frame is reduced to a skeleton and presents
-in anticipation a picture of the state in which
-death will soon place them. Many parts, as the
-loins, thighs and lower extremities are often remarkable
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">53</span>
-for their extreme emaciation. Sainte Marie who
-has observed this fact, attributes it and also the debility
-of these parts, to a morbid state of the spinal marrow,
-and not unjustly. The facility with which onanists
-regain their flesh on leaving off these bad habits, is
-equally remarkable with their rapid loss of substance.
-There are individuals however who remain thin and
-dried up through life, in consequence of abusing themselves
-while young.</p>
-
-<p>The loss of strength generally follows the loss of
-flesh and returns also with it. At first debility only
-follows the act temporarily, but afterward it continues
-longer: new emissions of semen take place, and even
-before the subject of them has regained the strength
-exhausted by a previous indulgence. In the morning
-he rises from his bed with difficulty: during the day
-he is idle, stupid, and indolent, and pursues his avocations
-without any spirit. If he goes up stairs, or
-ascends a hill, his heart beats forcibly, and he pants
-very much. This debility, if the cause which produces
-it does not cease to act, may increase to a frightful
-degree. We have seen onanists whose bodies
-were bent down by the weight of the head and chest
-and curved as in old men: these individuals could
-not stand erect, their lower extremities could not support
-their weight, and at the least motion they felt
-giddy and faint, and finally terminated the remnant of
-their existence on a sofa or bed which they could not
-leave. Many authors, Sanctorius and Tissot among
-others, have asserted that this debility is greater or
-less according to the position of the body during the
-act of venery; but we attach but slight importance to
-this circumstance, although they may have some effect.
-We think more of Sainte Marie’s opinion, that
-the lower part of the body is frequently weaker than
-the upper, because the spinal marrow is affected by
-seminal emissions. As the flesh returns when the
-onanist ceases from his bad habits, so too does his
-strength, and generally rapidly. But there are many,
-who are affected during their whole lives with great
-debility, which unfits them for many occupations. It
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">54</span>
-is very common to find individuals who complain of
-being incapable of any physical effort, and who request
-their physician to give them strength. On
-questioning them, almost all admit that in their youth
-they have been addicted to onanism. Some do not
-wait to be questioned but refer to their former excesses
-as the source of their troubles and denounce them as
-the cause of their actual debility. Most invalids however
-do not refer so far back to the origin of their illness
-or even do not dream of it: they remain at peace
-with themselves and their ignorance might deserve to
-be respected, if they were not or would not probably
-be fathers, and if it did not become us to excite their
-vigilance in regard to their children. Thus then venereal
-abuses may cause not only a transient debility,
-but an exhaustion which may be continued, as long as
-life lasts.</p>
-
-<p>The loss of flesh and strength is not the only
-symptom of consumption which <i>undermine gradually</i>
-the onanist: many signs indicate that all the
-functions are affected as it were with a loss of
-strength. The countenance instead of the vermilion
-glow of health, is pale and without freshness, or of a
-yellowish, earthy, leaden, and livid teint; the lips lose
-their color, a bluish circle surrounds the eyes, the eyelids
-are puffed out with œdema: the flesh is soft and
-flaccid: the pulse is small and feeble: upon the
-slightest motion or during sleep, the forehead, chest
-and palms of the hands are bathed with profuse perspiration:
-in some patients the hands and feet are
-edematous: in short, the symptoms are those of general
-atony, which are attended with a slow hectic
-fever, denoting that the economy does not yield without
-reaction to the destructive disease.</p>
-
-<p>We ought perhaps to wait before speaking of the
-disturbance of the digestive organs, which almost
-constantly attends venereal abuses, until we had finished
-describing the symptoms of voluntary spermatorrhœa
-and were stating the diseases resulting from it.
-In fact the digestion is deranged then only because
-the digestive organs are diseased, and are affected with
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">55</span>
-dyspepsy, gastritis, erteritis, &amp;c.; but these derangements
-are so common after the loss of the seminal
-fluid, that we think ourselves authorized to treat these
-derangements as symptoms. Venereal excesses may
-affect the digestive organs in several ways, first by
-disturbing digestion if they occur while this process
-is going on: this fact has already been stated. We
-might add that when food is taken too soon after masturbation
-or coition digestion is seldom performed
-well. This fact did not escape the notice of Sanctorius,
-who remarks, <i>Cibus copiosior solito post immoderatum
-coition interimeret nisi succederet aliqua
-ciborum corruptela</i>. Venereal excesses may also
-affect the digestive apparatus in another manner besides
-that of directly disturbing its functions. This
-system is so intimately connected with all parts of
-the human body that all are influenced by it. If then
-the digestive functions are disturbed by most morbid
-states, can they remain uninjured when so many
-symptoms are presented by the genital apparatus which
-has become the focus of so many symptoms! Certainly
-not: these functions also take a part and a large part
-in the disorders which are the usual consequences of
-venereal excesses. A moderate exercise of the genital
-organs may excite the stomach, render the appetite
-more keen and the digestion more rapid. Hence why
-young men who begin to masturbate or to indulge
-with women have frequently an insatiable appetite,
-which leads them to eat constantly, which is very
-striking inasmuch as debility and loss of flesh ensue
-in just the same manner. But such a state of things
-cannot long continue: thus numerous signs soon
-show that excesses in venery may act on the digestive
-tube in another manner than by rendering the appetite
-more keen and the digestion more easy. In
-fact the appetite does not long resist excesses of onanism:
-it first diminishes, then disappears, and is often
-replaced by a decided disgust for every kind of food;
-in some patients it becomes irregular, capricious: in
-others it remains: the latter have most cause of complaint,
-for it continues longer than digestion is performed.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">56</span>
-“My appetite remains,” writes an onanist
-to Tissot, “but it is a misfortune, as eating is followed
-by pain in the stomach and my food is rejected.”
-Many onanists feel pains of a similar character
-after eating. In others there is a sense of oppression,
-of fulness, in the epigastric region. In some there is
-a gnawing feeling resembling that produced by a
-want of food: this symptom is very common in girls,
-who in consequence of secret practices, have become
-affected with leucorrhœa. In some the face and
-cheeks present a redness which contrasts remarkably
-with their habitual paleness: onanists are frequently
-affected with headache, vertigo, flushed face, &amp;c. In
-some the slowness of the digestion is indicated by
-eructations, which occur long after taking food: or
-the belly is tense and filled with wind. Food, which
-was formerly digested with ease, is now oppressive:
-and the list of articles of diet is shortened every day.
-Some onanists have been known in these cases to indulge
-in ardent spirits with the vain hope of exciting
-their appetite, and regaining their strength. Repeated
-vomitings, constant pain in the belly and a slow fever
-are also frequent symptoms of the deep-seated affections
-of the digestive organs. In many patients the
-intestinal canal is more liable to be affected by venereal
-excesses, than the stomach. Obstinate constipation
-in some, diarrhœa and borborygmi in others are
-the usual signs of the affection of this canal. Fournier
-and Begin mention the case of a young man,
-who almost constantly experienced after excess in
-coition, severe colics followed by excessive diarrhœa
-and an insupportable tenesmus. Rest, gummy drinks,
-the use of farinaceous food and a small quantity of
-red wine, soon dissipated these symptoms, which
-sometimes threw him into an alarming state of languor
-and debility. (<i>Dict. des. Sc. Med.</i>, <i>art. Masturbation</i>.)
-Hoffman relates a similar case. We
-have more than once met with similar effects. A
-young man whom we attended in 1832 died, after excesses
-in onanism, with diarrhœa. This unfortunate
-individual, although in the last stages of consumption,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">57</span>
-still indulged as soon as he was left alone, in his deplorable
-habit. Diarrhœa, or rather intestinal ulcerations,
-which are then the cause of it, generally appear
-in onanists as in those affected with consumption, at
-the last stages of life. Thus a young man, nineteen
-years old, addicted to masturbation from childhood,
-died a few years since at Hotel Dieu. The most
-active watching and the strictest mechanical methods
-could not arrest his fatal manipulations. Diarrhœa
-was added to his habitual loss of semen, and he died
-three months after entering the hospital, in a perfect
-state of marasmus.</p>
-
-<p>Many authors have repeated after the statements of
-Hippocrates, that individuals affected with consumption,
-arising from venereal excesses, have no fever.
-This is an error: they die as we have already stated,
-with true hectic fever, which is caused by the state of
-the different organs, and particularly by that of the
-genital system. Of this, numerous instances might
-be cited: the following is related by Dr. Federigo, the
-Italian translator of Portal’s work on consumption.
-“I knew,” says he, “a female who was affected for
-many years with extreme debility and entire loss of
-appetite. A slow fever every evening had rendered
-her extremely thin: her eyes were pale and sunken;
-her skin was very hot, and it was highly painful
-for her to stand erect: a profuse discharge weakened
-her still more; and she was in an advanced state of
-marasmus. All the active remedies, as preparations
-of iron, decoctions of cinchona and mineral waters
-were tried without success. She died in a most deplorable
-state of consumption. I attempted, by questioning
-her as to her mode of living, to discover the
-cause of this disease, but unsuccessfully. A month
-before her death however, she told me with tears in
-her eyes, that she brought her debility upon herself,
-by indulging constantly and for many years in a
-secret and murderous habit.” We will add that
-Sainte Marie having found that daily involuntary
-pollution occurred in diseases of languor, as soon as
-he became acquainted with the dissertation of Wichmann,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">58</span>
-discovered that many slow nervous fevers were
-kept up by this affection.</p>
-
-<p>From our remarks on the influence exercised by the
-genital organs on the nervous system, even when
-simply in a state of excitement or repose, it will not
-surprise, if we should state, that in this system are
-seen the affections resulting most frequently from the
-abuse of these organs. In fact the diseases of motion,
-sensation or of intelligence, that is of the faculties
-which are situated in the nervous system, are in fact
-the most common consequences of masturbation, and
-of venereal excesses generally. We have already
-spoken of the gradual diminution in the locomotive
-powers of the onanist. That of sensation presents
-very different phenomena, it is exalted as much as the
-first is diminished. Farther it is admitted that these
-two faculties are in an inverse ratio to one another.
-This increase of the susceptibility may take place at
-any age in consequence of venereal excesses; but it
-occurs much more readily in young persons, that is
-at that period of life when the mode of sensation assumes
-those characters which at a later period more
-than all the others constitute the temperament. Thus
-the excessive susceptibility generally presented by
-onanists, does not belong to those transient symptoms
-which disappear when the habit ceases: but, on the
-contrary, it continues, long after the habit has ceased,
-and its influence is long felt. How many persons of
-every age complain of being extremely nervous.
-Some know that this depends upon their own conduct,
-which they deeply regret. Interrogate them, and
-many will admit the excesses of their youth. We
-have rarely neglected to verify this remark and the
-responses have generally confirmed my suspicions.
-These individuals are seldom free from disagreeable
-feelings, from pain and inconvenience of some kind:
-their symptoms may vary extremely, and change very
-suddenly, but they are generally or always indisposed
-one way or another. This can be readily imagined:
-every thing affects them: cold, heat, dryness, moisture,
-rain, snow, food, drink, exercise, rest, in fact all
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">59</span>
-these modifying circumstances find in them an organization
-ready to be acted on. The act of venery,
-the first source of their nervous susceptibility, subjects
-them to constant privations. A young man,
-twenty-two years old, whom we attended a few
-months since, told me in a depressed manner the constant
-inconveniences which he experienced from onanism.
-The following is his narrative, which we shall
-give here because it presents a faithful picture of the
-state in which the nervous system exists in most persons
-who have indulged in onanism.</p>
-
-<p>“At sixteen years of age,” said he, “I learned to
-masturbate; this habit, I continued, for several years,
-with a kind of fury. My health soon became affected,
-my strength failed and also my digestion. I soon
-perceived a heat and constant pain in my stomach:
-my throat was inflamed and my feelings were extremely
-bad. The advice which I received and the
-alteration in my health, caused me to renounce this
-habit. My situation soon improved and I gained
-daily, but at the same time my desires returned and I
-shortly relapsed into my former errors. The same
-cause produced the same effects and I again abandoned
-onanism, promising never to indulge again. For two
-years I kept my word: unhappily this time however
-my health was not restored as at first, and I continually
-experienced all the sufferings which I have described.
-Besides I have become so sensitive that
-every thing incommodes me: the least change in the
-weather and particularly a storm causes me a great
-deal of suffering. Farther I cannot say what temperature
-is best for me, for I do not experience much
-difference whether it be cold or warm. I have but
-little desire for females, and although indulging at
-times after long intervals, yet I have always suffered
-for several days afterward, in the same manner as
-after masturbation. I feel constant pains of a lacerating
-character in the limbs: sometimes also, but more
-rarely pains in the back; often also, I have pains in
-the stomach and colic. My digestion although better
-than before, is far from being good: I can take but a
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">60</span>
-few articles of food, and the smallest portion of wine,
-spirit, or coffee produces great distress.” This was
-the young man’s statement: he was deeply affected
-by the slightest cause: his appearance was sad, he
-was tired of himself and was constantly tormented
-by thoughts of his former excesses. I have seen him
-several times since; and I have reason to believe that
-his obedience to my advice improved his health.</p>
-
-<p>It may be said that this patient is a hypochondriac.
-I admit it: but what is hypochondria, save an excessive
-susceptibility, added to all the inconveniences
-which result from it, and the derangement of the digestive
-functions? And hence all authors who have
-spoken of this disease, and of hysteria, which resembles
-it in so many respects, have classed venereal excesses
-among their most common causes. I might
-cite in proof of this, Tissot, Louyer-Villermey, Fod&eacute;r&eacute;,
-Foville and many others. Oppenheim, physician
-to the grand vizier, attributes the frequency of
-hypochondria and of hysteria among the orientals, to
-their abuse of the pleasures of love. Pinel gives the
-history of a hypochondriac who at the age of puberty
-abandoned himself to masturbation which was followed
-by frequent involuntary pollutions. In another
-place he speaks of a similar case: and almost every
-practitioner can mention several.</p>
-
-<p>The affection of the nervous system in onanists
-consists not only in an increased susceptibility, but is
-indicated also, by a number of symptoms, as pains
-sensations and spasms of every kind. Angelot has
-related the case of a young man affected with constant
-discharge of semen, who, among other phenomena,
-presented so great a degree of nervous irritation
-that he experienced a vibration over his whole body
-at the slightest noise. Some patients experience
-pains in the limbs as if they had been beaten; others
-are affected with intense headache and pains in the
-loins which reappear at each pollution: or wandering
-pains, which however are sometimes fixed, are felt in
-the course of the nerves and are similar to neuralgia.
-We shall see hereafter that painful affections
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">61</span>
-of various kinds have been the more or less direct
-consequence of venereal excesses. Sensations of
-giddiness, of formication or crawling, &amp;c., may also
-be perceived: some patients experience cramps which
-at first are felt only during the act of venery, but
-which afterwards reappear at other times. Spasms,
-contractions and generally the convulsive motions so
-often observed in onanists usually result from severe
-affections of the nervous centres, affections
-which we shall speak of directly. A very frequent
-symptom and one too which has never deceived me
-as to its nature, says Georget, are palpitations of the
-heart attended with difficulty in the respiration, slight
-suffocating feelings, &amp;c. He remarks also that fainting
-and partial or general trembling appears on the
-slightest contradiction and often without any known
-cause in onanists. These remarks are very true:
-palpitations and stifling sensations continue sometimes
-for years after onanism has ceased, and fainting fits,
-trembling sensations, &amp;c. show themselves during or
-immediately after the act of venery.</p>
-
-<p>The heart and the mind suffer as much as the body
-from excesses of masturbation. To be assured of this
-we have only to remember the power exercised by the
-genital organs in the physiological state, on the ideas
-and feelings. Generally the necessity which the
-onanist experiences for dissembling his tastes and for
-concealing a habit which is both ridiculous and vile,
-renders him taciturn: his eyes are turned from the
-gaze of those around: he loves solitude, avoids the
-world and is embarrassed, and almost as it were
-ashamed of himself. His manner might sometimes
-pass for timidity, we might almost say for innocence,
-but it is entirely changed, when being in company
-with professed onanists he no longer feels restraint.</p>
-
-<p>It is to this habit of dissimulation, this inquietude
-with which the onanist is constantly haunted, that
-Montegre attributes particularly the difference between
-self-pollution and coition: but this moral torment is
-far as we shall see from being the only one with
-which the onanist is affected.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">62</span></p>
-
-<p>In fact, he constantly experiences a sensation of
-sadness and ennui, which is impressed on his countenance
-and which is the natural consequence of restlessness
-and of the fatigue which he feels constantly.
-He is sad as one is when suffering, and when debility
-are felt. This inward feeling of shame which is
-banished with difficulty when the actions reputed to
-be bad are often repeated, must also contribute to increase
-his melancholy and sadness. But perhaps the
-worst feelings which torment him, are regret and remorse.
-The exhaustion of his system, his sufferings,
-the near approach of death often render him desperate.
-He remembers the time when he did not indulge
-in onanism: he remembers those who first
-taught him that vice: his shame, his pains and fears
-all come up strongly before him. Being the author of
-his own misfortunes he constantly reproaches himself,
-and he remembers all that has been said to wean
-him from the habit. Now picture with these regrets
-these fears, and the despair we have described, the
-existence of this fatal habit which cannot be overcome.
-The onanist knows this danger and yet he
-cannot break himself of his bad habit.</p>
-
-<p>It can readily be supposed that onanists tortured by
-the present and by the thoughts of the future which
-appears to them overshadowed with clouds, have often
-wished to terminate their sufferings criminally. This
-has in fact sometimes happened. “I do not believe,”
-writes an onanist to Tissot, “that any human being
-has suffered as much as I have. Without the special
-care of Providence I should find it difficult to support
-the burden of life.” Some have not the courage to
-sustain life. Esquirol has often known masturbation
-to lead to melancholy and suicide. Orfila also mentions
-among the occasional causes of suicide “the
-physical and moral disgust, intellectual apathy without
-any hope of cure which often follows premature
-indulgences of every kind.” If the resources of nature
-had been known to those who thus abandon
-themselves to despair; if they had witnessed, as we
-have, the rapidity with which the health is restored,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">63</span>
-when onanism is arrested, if they had believed in the
-healing power of time, they would have seen that
-their pains might disappear, their strength might have
-been restored, and they might have enjoyed a long
-and happy life. The following case will teach onanists
-not to despair.</p>
-
-<p>A gentleman, twenty-four years old, says M. Sainte
-Marie, in order to avoid conscription shut himself up
-in an isolated chateau under the charge of an old and
-confidential domestic. There in order to lighten the
-ennui of his situation he gave himself up to onanism.
-After three years of this forced seclusion and dangerous
-excess, he reappeared in the world; he was excessively
-pale and thin, which was attributed to the
-extreme loneliness in which he existed. Marriage
-was urged upon him as a mode of relieving, by an
-agreeable establishment, this long ennui; his strength
-however failed him the night of his marriage, and he
-was unable, as Montaigne says, to consummate the
-nuptials. He became disgusted with himself, and
-this feeling soon settled into one of deep and fixed
-despair. One day he swallowed a large dose of arsenic,
-but vomited it soon after with the food which he
-had eaten. He then came to Lyons to seek a death
-which he considered more worthy of his birth and
-station. He followed very closely for several days a
-celebrated fencer, and finding an opportunity to insult
-him, did so, with no other intent than that of losing,
-sword in hand, a life which had become hateful to
-him. The fortune of arms decided otherwise: although
-feeble and languid, he wounded his adversary,
-and this slight advantage suddenly changed his resolution.
-He now saw that life was not a series of defeats
-and humiliations: he desired to live, and in this
-frame of mind he came to consult me. His impotence
-seemed but a slight symptom. I readily saw
-that it was only the symptom of a well marked dorsal
-consumption. I prescribed ice to be taken internally,
-iced water douches to be used along the vertebral
-column and a milk diet. After continuing this treatment
-three months, the patient’s health seemed perfectly
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">64</span>
-restored. He left Lyons, and rejoined his family,
-who were much concerned at his long absence. I
-learn now that he is very happy, and that his wife has
-presented him with three living pledges of affection.
-(<i>Wichmann</i>, <i>p.</i> 91.)</p>
-
-<p>Besides the intellectual and moral effects which we
-have mentioned, onanism often produces a very marked
-debility of the mental faculties, and particularly of the
-memory. Young men, who previously showed considerable
-vivacity of mind and aptitude for study, become,
-after being addicted to this habit, stupid, and
-incapable of applying themselves: it is evident, that
-this transitory state which immediately succeeds the
-act of venery, becomes continued when this act is frequently
-repeated, because time is not allowed for the
-effects of it to pass off. This debility of the intellectual
-faculties must not always be considered as irremediable:
-in fact, these individuals sometimes regain their
-original acuteness, when the habit which had enfeebled
-them is discontinued, before the deterioration
-is of long standing. We might adduce instances of
-this return. The most remarkable, assuredly, is that
-of an idiot girl, who was restored to reason by amputation
-of the clitoris&mdash;an operation performed by Dr.
-Graefe, of Berlin. In a future page, we shall give
-this interesting case in full. Unfortunately, the simple
-cessation of onanism is not always sufficient to efface
-its effects completely; and many individuals preserve,
-during their whole existence, a certain feebleness of
-mind, which arises from the excesses of their youth.
-The debility of the intellectual faculties does not always
-stop at the point indicated: it may extend almost
-to idiocy&mdash;to the most complete stupidity. Most generally,
-then, the brain, or its appendages, are deeply
-injured, which is indicated by different symptoms, as
-loss of sight, hearing, fits, paralysis, &amp;c. This was
-the case with an individual, whose case is stated by
-Serrurier, and who became, through onanism, perfectly
-imbecile. This is true, too, of an idiot, who was under
-the charge of Pinel, in the infirmary of Bic&ecirc;tre. He
-was a sculptor, who had previously been exhausted by
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">65</span>
-intemperance and venery. He remained almost motionless
-and quiet, or at intervals indulged in a foolish
-laugh. His face was destitute of expression, and he
-had no remembrance of his former state. His appetite
-was always good; and, even at the sight of food, his
-jaws began to move. He constantly remained in a
-recumbent posture; and, finally, became affected with
-hectic fever, which terminated fatally.</p>
-
-<p>It is worthy of remark, in those onanists who become
-idiots, that, while the external senses and the intelligence
-diminish, the genital activity is increased: all
-these faculties seem to be blended in one, the proportions
-of which seem much greater, as the others are
-diminished. This opposite state of things, found in
-all cases produced by onanism, is particularly remarkable
-in a case observed at the Hospital St. Louis, by
-Alibert. The patient was a peasant-girl twenty-two
-years old, who was constantly employed in tending
-sheep. The seclusion of this girl’s situation favored
-the development of onanism. She concealed herself
-in retired and quiet situations, to indulge this horrid
-inclination. Two years elapsed, during which her intellectual
-faculties were progressively enfeebled: she
-became stupid, while the venereal sense was excited
-to the highest degree. Things came to such an extent,
-that she fell, as it were, into a species of nymphomania,
-for which she was carried to the hospital. The unfortunate
-girl presented a kind of automatic motion, which
-she could not repress. Her head, chest, and upper
-half of her body were excessively thin, while the other
-half was remarkably plump. The sight, and much
-more the contact of a male, caused in her a state which
-was soon terminated by a pollution. By merely touching
-this girl, her whole person could be agitated and
-convulsed to a distressing degree, and it was thought
-expedient to send her home. (<i>Dict. des Sc. Med., Vol.
-XXXVI., p. 582.</i>)</p>
-
-<p>Are the alternate states of excitement and collapse
-experienced by the brain, during and after the act of
-venery, the only cause of weakness in onanists? Does
-not the constant state of their mind contribute also, as
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">66</span>
-Tissot and many other authors think, to this unfortunate
-result? Of this, we have no doubt.</p>
-
-<p>The yoke which onanism imposes on those who are
-completely abandoned to it, is such, that they have constantly
-before them a certain set of ideas. All their
-study is confined to avoid the looks of others, and to
-call to mind all the remembrances, and to create all
-the illusions, upon which their senses revel: their
-strength of mind is consecrated to these objects alone.
-To dissemble, and enjoy themselves, is all they wish.
-The intellectual faculties, being thus neglected, must
-remain imperfect; or even, if we may be allowed the
-expression, must lose their vigour, and waste. We can
-understand well how the necessity arising from this
-state of things may aid the development of the most
-wicked thoughts. Was not this the case with a young
-girl, whose history, as stated by Parent Duchatelet, is
-as follows:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>This girl, whose early childhood was spent with her
-grandmother, a respectable and religious woman, was
-about seven years old, when she returned home. For
-the first four months after her return, she was very sad
-and was not as playful as children are generally, and
-never caressed her father and mother. She lost flesh
-rapidly. The cause of this was sought for in vain;
-when, one day, a few questions having been put to
-her, she stated, that from the age of four years she had
-been in the habit of seeing boys from ten to twelve
-years old; that since she had returned home, she had
-had no opportunity, and had indulged in self-pollution.
-In vain did her parents try to wean her from this vice:
-they reasoned with and caressed her; they gave her
-presents, and all the clothes she desired; physicians
-visited her; the powers of religion were tried. But all
-in vain: the child abused herself, even in her sleep.</p>
-
-<p>But a horrid inclination soon appeared: she now
-desired to see her parents dead, and even to murder
-them. This wish she expressed freely, and also her
-regret at not being able to satisfy her wishes. She
-promised herself to embrace any opportunity which
-presented. The only motives which induced her to
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">67</span>
-do this, were to possess her mother’s jewels, and then
-to go with the men. Things soon came to such an
-extent, that the parents, for their own safety, were
-obliged to lock up their daughter every night, as she
-did not conceal her intention of assassinating them
-during sleep. The child, being in this manner less
-exposed to observation, abandoned herself to her habits
-without constraint, it being the only wish she could
-gratify. She never laughed, nor cried. She sat the
-whole day in a very small chair, with her hands
-crossed, and she abused herself as soon as her mother’s
-back was turned. Punishments succeeded no better
-than presents or caresses. One day, her father tied
-her to the bedstead: she said, “You may kill me; but
-I will not change.” These facts gave rise to a judicial
-investigation, from the minutes of which this statement
-is taken. (<i>Arch. d’hygiene et de med. legale</i>,
-<i>January</i>, 1832.)</p>
-
-<p>This young girl certainly had inclinations which
-were the result of her organization. She never became
-attached even to the grandmother who brought
-her up; and whom also she would have destroyed for
-her jewels. She was not animated by the wish to
-kill, as by that of acquiring a desired object. One day,
-while a man was talking with her, she looked attentively
-at his breast-pin: when questioned on the subject,
-she admitted that she would kill this man for the
-sake of this jewel. Her passion for venereal pleasures
-also came from an organic arrangement: she had never
-been led into these enjoyments by men or women.
-When four years old, she sought after little boys; and
-it was not till she was deprived of them, that she resorted
-to onanism. She admitted that she preferred
-the boys.</p>
-
-<p>Now, I would ask, if this primitive exaltation of a
-sense, which masturbation excited still more every
-day, could govern a disposition which caused her to
-regard homicide as the best mode of satisfying certain
-desires? Could that state of fatigue, which is constantly
-felt in those individuals who are addicted to
-onanism, excite in this young girl the sympathies which
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">68</span>
-unite each individual to his fellows, and give strength
-to those bonds which she was always ready to break?
-Was it possible for her to love her parents, who constantly
-thwarted her desires? Would not the irritation
-she constantly felt at not being able to give herself
-completely up to venereal pleasures, react on her
-other inclinations? Would not the obstacles she encountered
-tend to make her think herself surrounded
-with enemies? Governed by one sense, was she in a
-state to listen to and understand all that was said to
-her, to modify her bad inclinations? Did not her
-state resemble that of animals, who, although mild
-and amiable, become dangerous and wicked, when the
-genital sense is excited? Finally, does not this case
-prove that deviations of character may result from
-onanism&mdash;that good feelings may be changed by this
-habit&mdash;or, at least, that bad ones may be called into
-action?</p>
-
-<p>Moral depravity of another kind may result from
-onanism. The mind, accustomed to seek pleasure in
-a certain circle of ideas, or a peculiar series of sensations,
-cannot find any in any other manner. The enjoyments
-of onanism are then the only ones which the
-onanist can realize. The union of the sexes has no
-attraction for him: he indulges with repugnance, and
-thinks the sensations much less agreeable than those
-arising from self-pollution. The genital sense, the
-power of proceeding to the act of venery, and of procreating,
-remain: but depraved tastes have taken the
-place of the legitimate desires. Tissot regards this
-perversion as more frequent in females than in males:
-he remarks upon the case of a female as stated by Bekkers,
-over whose mind self-pollution had taken such
-possession, that she detested the legitimate modes of
-gratification.</p>
-
-<p>We believe, that if there are females who prefer
-onanism to coition, it is because the sensual results of
-the latter are generally very uncertain. Besides, Tissot
-does not exclude the male sex from this kind of
-depravation: the same author states the history of a
-man, who, in being taught onanism by his preceptor,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">69</span>
-experienced, when first married, so great a disgust for
-the natural relations which result from it, added to the
-exhaustion caused by his manipulations, that he became
-melancholy; which state, however, yielded to appropriate
-remedies.</p>
-
-<p>A fact published by Alibert is very analogous to the
-preceding. He states, that a young man, brought up
-in a boarding-house, contracted the habit of onanism
-in his childhood. Tissot’s book was put into his hands,
-which frightened, but did not entirely cure him. After
-reading it, however, he was more moderate, and indulged
-only at long intervals, and when he was excited
-by very violent desires. Hence, his temperament did
-not change; but he continued robust, and his moral
-faculties preserved their energy: but the frightful habit
-which he had contracted, prevented the development
-of any desire for the other sex. Even when thirty
-years old, he had never been excited by the sight of a
-female; and his feelings were called into action only
-by vain images, or by the phantoms of his depraved
-imagination. He had early studied drawing, which he
-had always pursued with ardor. The beautiful forms
-of men, in this beau-ideal of painters, which nature
-has never realized, affected him, and finally inspired
-him with an extraordinary emotion&mdash;a vague passion,
-for which he could not account. It is necessary, however,
-to remark, that this passion had no connexion
-with the tastes of sodomy, and that it could not be excited
-by the sight of any man. Such was his strange
-situation, when he came to ask my advice. He then
-presented, as I said before, no physical symptom of
-impotence. He was healthy and well-made, and nature
-had not been unkind to him; but he had so abused
-the use of her gifts, that it was difficult to restore to
-him their proper use. The patient was perfectly acquainted
-with his situation. “There is no effort,”
-said he, “that I am not willing to make, to free myself
-from my ignominious situation&mdash;to drive away from
-my thoughts the infamous images which haunt me.
-They have deprived me of the legitimate enjoyments
-procured by the union of the sexes&mdash;of the power possessed
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">70</span>
-by the lowest animals of reproducing their species.
-I am dying of chagrin and shame.”</p>
-
-<p>I considered his disease as a perversion of the venereal
-appetite. I thought that the most urgent indication
-was to restore nature to its true type. In fact, the
-individual was very robust, at the period of consulting
-me; and farther, as I have said, the beauty of the ideal
-forms of man excited in him voluptuous sensations,
-during the continuance of which the genital organs
-became excited, and there was a discharge of semen:
-this favored the supposition that he still retained some
-stamina. Hence, there was neither destruction nor
-essential alteration in his physical sensibility; but
-rather a false direction of this faculty of the organism.
-The following course of treatment was proposed. I
-have already said, that the patient was very fond of
-drawing, and that he applied himself to it with that
-ardor which is the sure guaranty of success. I required
-him to study carefully the female form, and to make
-drawings of it&mdash;to break through his habits, and to renounce
-the Belvidere Apollo for the Venus de Medicis.
-He did so. Nature gradually resumed her rights: he
-soon preferred a round and delicate arm to that which
-was strong and masculine; and when he contemplated
-the elegance and softness of contour in the female
-form, he began to be cured. After constructing an
-imaginary model, he sought for it in the physical world.
-Time was required, and perseverance; but he was perfectly
-restored.</p>
-
-<h3 id="Diseases_resulting_from_venereal_excesses">&sect; 2. <small>DISEASES ARISING FROM VENEREAL EXCESSES.</small></h3>
-
-<p>There are but few diseases which have not been
-observed as occurring after venereal excesses. The
-influence of the genital organs is so great, and extends
-so perfectly to all points of the organism, that the
-slightest morbid disposition of the latter is favored by
-its action. Capable of fecundating all the germes of
-the diseases which occur, the abuse of the genital organs
-produces all those which may happen in the body.
-Hence, we must not be astonished to see venereal excesses
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">71</span>
-mentioned in enumerating the direct or indirect
-causes of most of them. We should certainly sometimes
-be embarrassed to justify this indication by positive
-proofs; for we do not know all that exists, and
-written science does not represent all that has been
-seen: but, as we know that a powerful influence only
-requires to exist with a morbid arrangement, to make
-of it a disease, the knowledge of this fact alone authorizes
-us to place venereal excesses, which have so injurious
-an effect, among the productive causes of most
-affections of the body.</p>
-
-<p>Those diseases which are the consequence of this
-cause generally have a special mark, which depends
-not only upon the fact, that in a great many cases it
-continues to act when they are developed, and therefore
-deranges their course; but which results also particularly
-from the presence among their symptoms of
-those which belong particularly to venereal excesses.
-Hence, if, in consequence of these excesses, an individual
-should be affected with phthisis, epilepsy, a
-chronic disease of the brain, spinal marrow, caries of
-the vertebr&aelig;, &amp;c., the patient will present, besides the
-special symptoms of these different affections, the signs
-of consumption already mentioned by us, and which
-are generally the consequences of the prolonged abuse
-of masturbation, or of coition; he will become thin,
-his strength will be exhausted, his eyes will be sunken,
-and present a dark ring beneath them; his countenance
-will be melancholy and suffused; his digestion will be
-deranged; he will suffer from wandering pains, from
-trembling, and from spasms; his mind will become
-enfeebled; and, finally, he will show many of the phenomena
-which we have described as general symptoms
-of venereal excesses. In these cases, there is, properly
-speaking, a complication of the special disease which
-they have produced, and of this other disease resulting
-as we have seen before, from the abuse of the
-genital organs. There are, at the same time, the general
-effects of this abuse, which may be seen in all
-those who are the victims of it, and the special characters
-of diseases which might have arisen from some
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">72</span>
-other cause. The practitioner who should be unacquainted
-with these facts, in regard to which we find
-nothing precise in authors, would be liable to mistakes
-which would render him liable to errors of prognosis
-and of treatment.</p>
-
-<p>The instances of individuals who have died of <i>apoplexy</i>,
-either of the cerebrum or cerebellum, during
-coition, are by no means rare. We can readily imagine,
-that if there be a marked disposition to this disease,
-and that if it be disposed to come on, the derangement
-in the respiration and circulation produced by
-the venereal action might hurry it. This has happened
-more than once during the digestion of a full
-meal. Most old men who have died during coition,
-have been affected with apoplexy. Hence, authors
-have generally placed venereal excesses among the
-causes of this affection.</p>
-
-<p>We will mention Cœlius Aurelian, Areltœus, Lomnius,
-Tissot, Pinel, Cruveilhier, Londe, &amp;c. Henry
-Van Hers mentions a man, forty years old, who was
-attacked with apoplexy while with his wife, the first
-night of his marriage. The attack, however, could
-not have been very severe, as it yielded readily to
-treatment: but the patient indulging in the pleasures
-of love a few days after his recovery, was again attacked,
-and died. (<i>Dict. des Sc. Med.</i>, <i>art. Apoplexie</i>.)
-Hoffmann mentions one. It was that of a soldier, who
-died in the act of coition. It was found, on opening
-his body, that blood was effused in the brain. Serres’
-work on the comparative anatomy of the brain states
-a similar instance. It is that of a man, thirty-two
-years old, who became affected with apoplexy during
-coition, and after drinking more freely than usual.
-Firm erection of the penis, which continued nearly
-until death had closed the scene, was added to the
-violent symptoms of apoplexy. The cerebrum was
-healthy; but the median lobe of the cerebellum exhibited
-traces of severe irritation; and the substance
-of the cerebellum was broken in several places; and
-small abscesses, filled with blood, were grooved along
-the superior vermicular process.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">73</span></p>
-
-<p>In some individuals, apoplexy supervenes so soon
-after venereal excesses, that we might reasonably anticipate
-that they contributed to its invasion. Thus,
-a steward, forty-nine years old, whose case is mentioned
-by Andral, fell down in the street, on coming
-from a house of ill-fame. He was immediately carried
-to the Maison de Sant&eacute;, near, where he died
-shortly afterward. On opening his body, two apoplectic
-lesions were found; one in the right hemisphere of
-the cerebellum, the other in the left hemisphere of the
-cerebrum.</p>
-
-<p>In coition, a marked congestion of blood takes place
-toward this organ. It is fair to presume, that such an
-act frequently repeated may predispose to an attack of
-apoplexy, which is decided sooner or later under the
-action of different causes. It is a fact, however, that
-this affection occurs frequently in those individuals
-who are accustomed to indulge in venereal pleasures.
-Serres reports the case of a man who indulged frequently,
-and who was attacked with apoplexy soon
-after a day passed in a house of ill-fame. He died two
-days afterward, presenting, among other symptoms,
-the erection of the penis, and an abundant discharge
-of semen. Post mortem examination showed, as in
-the preceding cases, apoplexy existing in the cerebellum.
-A similar case was reported by Dr. Guiot. It
-was that of a man, fifty-two years old, who was much
-addicted to women, and who, after several times suffering
-from cerebral congestions, was affected with
-mania. His genital organs were very much developed,
-and he was frequently affected with pollutions. He
-died, finally, of congestion, with hemiplegia, in twelve
-hours. Among the symptoms presented, were remarked
-erection of the penis, and as it were automatic motions
-of masturbation.</p>
-
-<p>Deep and chronic lesions have been observed in the
-encephalon of onanists, much more frequently than
-acute diseases. We published, in 1817, a case of
-chronic arachnitis, which seemed to depend on this
-cause. The patient was a boy seven years old, who
-entered the Hospital des Enfans, at the beginning of
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">74</span>
-the preceding year. This child, who was much addicted
-to masturbation, was usually affected with convulsions
-during this act. He finally became idiotic.
-He was extremely repugnant to take exercise, and he
-remained very quiet. His strength failed, his limbs
-wasted away, and finally he became affected with almost
-total blindness. The hearing, and generally the
-external and internal senses were also much weakened.
-Galvanism and other remedies were employed
-in vain. The patient died; and on opening the cadaver,
-we found a very marked inflammation of the
-portion of the meninges which follows the course of
-the superior longitudinal sinus. The surface of the
-brain, also, appeared to some assistants to be inflamed.
-In another patient, whose history is stated by Desruelles,
-in his memoir on the effects of onanism, the
-substance of the brain was affected. There was paralysis
-of the left arm, convulsions of the right arm
-and of the muscles of the face. On opening the cadaver,
-an encysted abscess was found in the hemisphere
-of the brain, on the side opposite to the paralysis,
-and corresponding to the convulsed limbs.</p>
-
-<p>Chronic alterations have frequently been found in
-the cerebellum of onanists. They have been mentioned
-by some as the cause, by others as the effect of
-onanism. But even admitting that in some cases these
-alterations may have been the beginning of this habit,
-this fact shows the bond which unites the genital organs
-and the cerebellum, and renders more probable
-the influence which they may exercise upon it. In
-fact, when the disease of one organ deranges the functions
-of another, we may be satisfied that an opposite
-result is possible. Farther, it would be impossible, in
-most of the cases of which we speak, to distinguish
-whether the cerebral affection or the masturbation had
-precedence. The only thing positively known is their
-coincidence; and this latter has appeared too frequently
-not to attract attention. We will mention
-several instances of it.</p>
-
-<p>A female, addicted at an early age to the pleasures
-of venery, finally indulged in prostitution; she was at
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">75</span>
-the same time addicted to onanism, and at last became
-affected with nymphomania. Ashamed of her situation,
-she submitted to cauterization of the clitoris, but
-without any good result. She finally died; and we
-found chronic irritation, with induration of the middle
-lobe of the cerebellum. Small sinuses, with callous
-edges, indicated that an inflammation had existed for
-a long time in this organ.</p>
-
-<p>Gall (in his treatise on the functions of the brain,
-Vol. III., p. 314) has given us the history of a boy,
-three years old, who was strongly addicted to onanism,
-and in whom two thirds of the cerebellum was found
-to be suppurated.</p>
-
-<p>A young man, nineteen years old, was so much addicted
-from his infancy to masturbation, that all mechanical
-means were tried in vain to conquer this fatal
-habit. It was even proposed to scarify the penis, in
-order that his motions might be prevented by pain.
-All attempts were in vain; and this unfortunate young
-man, exhausted by continual losses of semen, died
-three months after entering Hotel Dieu, in the most
-complete state of marasmus. He had often experienced
-attacks of epilepsy. On opening the dead body,
-we found in his cerebellum an encephaloid tumor the
-size of a nut, which had began to soften.</p>
-
-<p>A girl ten years old, addicted to masturbation, and
-of a melancholy temperament, complained for four
-months of severe pains in the head. These pains increased
-to such a degree, that for the last three weeks
-of her life she was constantly crying. She was finally
-carried to the Hospital des Enfans. The only additional
-information obtained in regard to her was, that
-the patient was bedridden for twelve days&mdash;that she
-was affected with vomiting of bile, followed by somnolence&mdash;that
-for three days she had ceased to speak,
-or answered with difficulty&mdash;that she constantly kept
-her hand to her head, which was thrown back. During
-the last four days, she was comatose: there was
-a slight degree of strabismus, and dilatation of the pupil.
-A post-mortem examination showed inflammation,
-with purulent infiltration of the arachnoid membrane,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">76</span>
-at the upper part of the cerebellum. The substance
-of the brain presented tubercles and a softening.</p>
-
-<p>Combette has related a case, which to our knowledge
-is unparalleled; viz., complete destruction of the cerebellum
-in a girl eleven years old, who was addicted
-to onanism. In place of this organ was found a gelatiniform
-membrane, attached to the medulla oblongata
-by a peduncle of a similar character. The genital
-organs of this girl presented evident marks of her
-habit: the finger could easily be introduced into the
-vagina; the hymen was absent; the external labia
-were of a bright red colour, and seemed to have been
-frequently irritated. All that is known of this patient,
-who died at the Hospital des Enfans, in 1831, is reduced
-to a few facts. She was born healthy and
-well-made, although she was slight; and her physical
-and intellectual development was slow, and very imperfect.
-On entering the Foundling Hospital the 13th
-of January, 1830, she was feeble and ricketty, had but
-little intelligence, and seemed indifferent to surrounding
-objects. She answered questions with difficulty
-and hesitation. Her legs, although feeble, still supported
-her; but she fell frequently. She was in the
-full possession of all her senses: her appetite was good.
-Her health suffered more the following months, and
-she was finally obliged to remain constantly in bed.
-Her constitution then appeared impaired, and she was
-as it were stupified. She was depressed, and complained
-neither of pleasure nor pain; if questioned, she
-merely answered yes or no. She laid constantly on
-her back, her head turned to the left, and she moved
-her limbs with great difficulty. She soon became affected
-with a continual diarrhœa; and she died fifteen
-months after entering the hospital, in a state of complete
-exhaustion. What was the effect of masturbation
-in this case? Was it the cause or effect of the
-malady, which had disorganized the brain? This
-habit certainly had a great deal to do with it. (<i>Revue
-Medicale, April, 1831.</i>)</p>
-
-<p>To these facts others might easily be added, where
-the affection of the brain was manifest, although not
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">77</span>
-verified by a post mortem observation: thus, in the
-following case mentioned by Serrurier, the epilepsy,
-loss of sight, and the destruction of the intellectual
-faculties, certainly indicated a deep lesion of the brain.
-“I always remember with horror,” says this author,
-“the frightful picture presented by a young soldier, after
-frequent indulgence in onanism, and of nocturnal
-pollutions, which were more violent and copious after
-each epileptic fit. This young man was in a perfect
-state of marasmus: his sight was lost entirely; he
-was perfectly imbecile, and even the calls of nature
-were unanswered by him. His body exhaled a particularly
-nauseous odour; his skin was livid; his tongue
-trembled; his eyes were sunken, his teeth decayed;
-and his arms were covered with ulcers, which indicated
-a scorbutic affection. This state continued for six
-months, when the melancholy man died, having struggled
-for a long time against death, which finally terminated
-his sufferings.”</p>
-
-<p>In the preceding case we can remark, in addition to
-the symptoms of the cerebral affection, the symptoms
-of the exhaustion of the cachexy, presented by individuals
-who have been reduced very low by onanism.
-A similar state is seen in the following case related by
-Tissot. Here the encephalic affection, to judge of it
-by the throwing back of the neck, and the violent pains
-experienced by the patient in this part, seemed to be
-situated in the cerebellum, medulla oblongata, or in
-those parts of the arachnoid membrane which are near
-them.</p>
-
-<p>L. D&mdash;&mdash; was by profession a watchmaker. He had
-lived prudently, and had enjoyed a good state of health,
-till he was about seventeen years of age. At this period,
-he gave himself up to masturbation, which he
-repeated every day, sometimes even to the third time;
-and the ejaculation was always preceded and followed
-by a slight insensibility, and a convulsive motion in
-the extending muscles of the head, which drew it very
-much back, whilst the neck was extremely swelled.
-A year had not elapsed, before he began to feel a
-great weakness after every act. This notification was
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">78</span>
-not sufficient to rescue him from his filthy practices:
-his soul, already devoted to this base habit, was incapable
-of forming any other idea, and the repetition of his
-crime became every day more frequent, till such time
-as he was in a state which gave reason to apprehend
-his death. Too late grown wise, the evil had already
-made so great a progress, that he was incurable; and
-the genital parts were become so easily irritated, and
-were so weak, that it was no longer necessary that
-this unhappy youth should be an agent, in order to
-shed his seed. The slightest irritation immediately
-procured an imperfect erection, which was constantly
-followed by an evacuation of this liquor, which daily
-increased his weakness. This spasm, of which he
-was not before sensible but in consummating the act,
-and which ceased therewith, was now become habitual,
-and frequently attacked him without any apparent
-cause, and in so violent a manner, that during the
-whole period of the fit, which sometimes lasted fifteen
-hours, and never less than eight, he felt such violent
-pains in the back part of the neck, that he did not
-scream out, but absolutely howled; and all this while
-it was impossible for him to swallow either solids or
-fluids. His voice was become hoarse; but I did not
-observe that it was more so while the fit continued.
-He entirely lost his strength, and was obliged to give
-up his profession, being altogether incapacitated: thus
-overwhelmed with misery, he languished, almost without
-any assistance, for some months; and was the
-more to be pitied, as what memory he had remaining,
-and which he was at length entirely bereft of, only
-served him to take an incessant retrospect of the cause
-of his misfortunes, which were increased by all the
-aggravating horrors of remorse. I heard of his situation,
-and went to him; I found a being that less resembled
-a living creature than a corpse, lying upon
-straw, meager, pale, and filthy, casting forth an infectious
-stench; almost incapable of motion, a watery
-palish blood issued from his nose; saliva constantly
-flowed from his mouth: having a diarrhœa, he voided
-his excrement in the bed without knowing it: he had
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">79</span>
-a continual flux of semen; his sore, watery eyes were
-deadened to that degree, that he could not move them:
-his pulse was very small, quick, and frequent: it was
-with great difficulty he breathed, reduced almost to a
-skeleton in every part, except his feet, which became
-œdematous. The disorder of his mind was equal to
-that of his body; devoid of ideas and memory, incapable
-of connecting two sentences, without reflection,
-without being afflicted at his fate, without any other
-sensation than pain, which returned with every fit, at
-least every third day. Far below the brute creation,
-he was a spectacle, the horrible sight of which cannot
-be conceived, and it was difficult to discover that he
-had formerly made part of the human species. I had
-immediate recourse to the assistance of strengthening
-remedies, in order to remove these violent spasmodic
-fits, which so dreadfully brought him back to sensibility
-only by pain: I contented myself with having
-given him some ease in this respect, and I discontinued
-administering remedies, which could not ameliorate
-his condition; he died at the end of a few
-weeks, in June, 1757, his whole body having become
-dropsical.</p>
-
-<p>In a case related by Bouteille, surgeon-general of
-the hospital at Lyons, most of the symptoms resulting
-from the cerebral affection existed in the right side of
-the body, and consequently indicated an affection of
-the opposite side of the cerebrum. The patient was
-a young girl twelve years old, whose constitution was
-weak and irritable, and very slightly developed&mdash;doubtless,
-on account of the enervating habit of onanism, in
-which she had indulged for several years, and which
-her mother’s vigilance could not prevent. Just after
-recovering from a severe illness, which yielded readily
-to remedies, this young girl was very much terrified,
-which had a great deal of influence upon her, as she
-was extremely sensitive; her sensibility being increased
-by the weak state of her nervous system, produced by
-onanism. Soon after, she was affected by slight convulsive
-motions in the right foot and arm, accompanied
-by a disagreeable pain in the right knee and in the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">80</span>
-sole of the foot of the same side. Notwithstanding
-the use of remedies, the disease increased, and she
-was soon unable to carry her food to her mouth, her
-arm was so much agitated. The appetite was variable,
-and the pulse was regular. Sometimes, and contrary
-to her usual custom, the patient was silent;
-sometimes she was extremely lively, and even foolish;
-sometimes her ideas were incoherent, and she often
-indulged in tears.</p>
-
-<p>Headache and dizziness were perceived, but they
-soon yielded. At a later period, the sight and hearing
-of the right side were considerably weakened: at the
-same time, the pain in the sole of the foot, knee, and
-part of the right hand became more intense, and the
-difficulty of walking increased. After a time, the disease
-seemed to improve a little: the convulsive motions
-abated; the intelligence and memory returned,
-as before the disease; but the sight and hearing remained
-as they were. An active mode of treatment
-was now used: electricity formed the principal remedy.
-The patient was finally cured. Need we remark,
-that in all probability the fright was only the
-occasion which excited the development of a disease
-already prepared for by the onanism. (<i>Trait&eacute; de la
-chos&eacute;e</i>, p. 352.)</p>
-
-<p>The convulsive form, the <i>epileptic</i>, is one of those
-assumed most frequently by the cerebral diseases produced
-by masturbation; we can easily conceive of this
-by remembering, that what takes place in the act of
-venery has, as we have already seen, a striking analogy
-with an attack of epilepsy: hence the ancients
-termed the act of coition, <i>a short fit of epilepsy</i>. It
-is unnecessary to state here the numerous testimonials
-found in authors, in regard to the influence of onanism
-as a cause of epilepsy. This influence is a fact mentioned
-and assented to by all. We shall relate a few
-examples.</p>
-
-<p>There are some individuals who are so susceptible,
-and present so great a disposition to epilepsy, that
-they have a regular attack of it whenever they indulge
-in the act of venery. Didier knew a merchant of
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">81</span>
-Montpelier, of whom this was true. Similar cases
-are related by Galen, Van-Hers, Tissot, Hoffmann,
-Haller, and many other authors. A similar thing is
-observed even in animals. Alfred Menard had a
-strong watch-dog, who was affected with epilepsy
-whenever he coupled with a slut. These attacks were
-characterized by convulsions, and a loss of consciousness:
-their duration varied, and was always connected
-with the ardour of the animal, who never was affected
-except under the circumstances mentioned. (<i>Revue
-medicale</i>, March, 1825.)</p>
-
-<p>Epilepsy sometimes supervenes directly after the
-excesses which cause it. Cole, cited by Esquirol, relates
-the case of a female, who became epileptic three
-days after marriage: but venereal abuses generally
-act slowly, and prepare the body for an attack of epilepsy,
-which this or some other cause excites. Esquirol
-relates the case of a young man, twelve or thirteen
-years old, who early in life was addicted to masturbation,
-and became extremely nervous, although strong
-and robust: at fifteen years of age he was affected
-with epilepsy. These attacks came on at the moon’s
-first quarter, and were very sudden: the patient fell
-down, uttered loud cries, and was generally convulsed:
-his eyes were open, fixed, and injected: the pupils
-were very much dilated: and when the fit passed
-off, he remained exhausted the rest of the day. This
-young man, like most onanists, was extremely susceptible,
-fretting upon the slightest pretext. After six
-months of treatment, the attacks became less frequent:
-at the end of a year they ceased. This young man
-might have been considered cured, but the pleasure of
-seeing his mother, from whom he had been separated
-for two years, caused a relapse: the same remedial
-means were again employed, and with success. He
-has, since that, entered into business, and has travelled
-extensively: his nervous system is strengthened:
-he married when twenty-seven years old, and has continued
-in good health.</p>
-
-<p>Another curious fact has been communicated to us
-by the celebrated Dr. Goupil. A little boy, only
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">82</span>
-eighteen months old, who had been put out to nurse,
-returned home with the habit of masturbation. At
-first, his parents thought but little of this; but when
-two years old, he was affected with an epileptic form
-of disease, characterized by loss of consciousness, convulsions
-of the muscles of the face and eyes, stiffness
-of the limbs, and sometimes he fell down. These fits
-becoming more and more frequent, Dr. Goupil was
-consulted. The patient was now three years and a
-half old, and still continued his bad habit. He was
-constantly sad, morose, and stupid. The doctor, not
-being at first aware of the cause, employed different
-medicines, but unsuccessfully: he then discovered the
-cause, and tried mechanical modes. He put on the
-boy, at night, a kind of strait jacket, by which his
-arms were kept crossed in front of the chest; and
-during the daytime, he was watched carefully. These
-means succeeding but imperfectly. Dr. Goupil employed
-another strait waistcoat, which was laced behind,
-and was furnished in front with a silver apparatus,
-to contain the genital organs, and having only an
-opening for the urine. This new obstacle did not
-answer as well as was expected, and the child sometimes
-escaped all vigilance: but as this was rare, he
-soon gained flesh, and also his strength and vivacity.
-The fits of epilepsy gradually became less frequent.
-This boy is now from nine to ten years old; enjoys
-good health; and, with the exception of a remarkable
-loss of memory, retains no trace of former indiscretions.</p>
-
-<p>These two cases show how far the system can be
-restored, when the cause which disturbs it ceases to
-act. The following, which was communicated by
-Zimmerman to Tissot, proves the same thing; but it
-also shows how soon a return to the bad habit destroys
-the good effects resulting from its abandonment.</p>
-
-<p>“I have seen,” says Zimmerman, “a man, twenty-three
-years old, who became epileptic, after debilitating
-his body by frequent masturbation. Whenever he had
-nocturnal pollutions, a fit of epilepsy ensued; and the
-same thing occurred after masturbation&mdash;from which,
-however, he did not abstain, notwithstanding the bad
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">83</span>
-symptoms with which it was followed. After the fit
-had subsided, he felt very severe pains in the kidneys,
-and around the coccyx. Having, however, abstained
-from his manipulations for some time, the pollutions
-disappeared; and we had hopes of curing the epilepsy,
-the attacks of which were less frequent. He had regained
-his strength, appetite, sleep, and color, after
-resembling a cadaver; but having returned to his bad
-habits, which were always followed by fits, he was
-found dead in his chamber one morning, bathed in
-blood.”</p>
-
-<p>Another convulsive affection, <i>St. Vitus’ dance</i>, has
-sometimes been caused by onanism. Marc Ant. Petit
-has published a case of it, which was communicated
-by Dr. Morelot. It is as follows:&mdash;A young girl, eight
-years old, became remarkably thin: her lower limbs
-were agitated by extraordinary motions, which were
-extended to the upper limbs. She soon lost all control
-over them. The twitching in the muscles of the
-face and eyes was excessive; the patient could not
-continue in her bed, and she was confined to a large
-chair. Her attending physician thought that this
-might be attributed to the presence of worms, and
-gave several anthelminthics, but without success. Dr.
-Morelot was consulted at this period, and thought that
-he could perceive the effects of a bad habit: he soon
-became convinced of its existence. By means of great
-watchfulness on the part of her parents, the use of
-cold baths, musk, and camphor, she was radically
-cured.</p>
-
-<p>Mental derangement is often the prevalent symptom
-in diseases of the brain, produced by excess of masturbation
-or coition. We have already spoken of
-idiocy; but this is by no means the only change observed
-in consequence of these excesses. Every variety
-of affection of the mind may be caused by them,
-as is proved by statistics collected by several authors,
-in insane asylums. Yet these abstracts are far from
-presenting the truth. “So many circumstances combine,”
-says Esquirol, “to embarrass the discovery of
-causes of mental alienation, that the one mentioned,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">84</span>
-like other causes, must often be unascertained by physicians.”
-According to this sagacious observer of all
-the forms of mental alienation, mania is produced least
-frequently by venereal excesses. He adds, that maniacs,
-during the duration of the periods of access, are
-less addicted, generally, than other deranged persons
-to masturbation; but when they do indulge, this act
-must be considered as a bad symptom, since it constitutes
-an insurmountable obstacle to the cure: it destroys
-the strength, and finally produces in the patients
-stupidity, phthisis, marasmus, and death.</p>
-
-<p>Dementia is, perhaps, the kind of derangement most
-frequently observed after masturbation. I saw a remarkable
-instance of this disease in a young man,
-twenty years old, who, indulging in these excesses for
-several years, gradually lost his mental faculties, became
-averse to even his relatives and dearest friends,
-and finally fell into a most perfect state of dementia.
-The relative frequency of this form of mental alienation
-in onanists has been pointed out in France by
-Esquirol, and in Norway by Holst. (<i>Annales d’hygiene
-publ.</i> December, 1830.)</p>
-
-<p>Holst has remarked, that paralysis, that fatal symptom
-which so frequently attends all varieties of derangement,
-particularly monomania and dementia, is observed
-particularly in those insane who are addicted
-to onanism, and to other venereal excesses. This
-remark is confirmed by the two facts, that paralysis is
-much less common in females than in males, and that
-onanism produces mental alienation much less frequently
-in the former than in the latter. Thus, of
-256 persons, admitted at the asylum at Charenton,
-during 1826-7-8, there were 44 men, in whom derangement
-could be attributed to libertinism or to onanism,
-while the same was true of only 3 women. Dr. Holst
-has shown that a similar proportion exists between the
-deranged of the two sexes in Norway. This relation,
-however, must not be considered as strictly correct;
-for females, being generally very reserved in their disclosures,
-onanism probably passes undiscovered in
-them more frequently than it does in men. It is well
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">85</span>
-ascertained, that one twentieth of the deranged at
-Salpetri&egrave;re, is composed of public women, who are
-for the most part affected with dementia and paralysis.
-Now, consider that masturbation is much more frequently
-a cause of derangement among the rich than
-among the poor. (<i>Dict. des Sc. Med.</i>, vol. xvi., p. 179.)
-And remark, too, that at the Charenton asylum, where
-only persons in easy circumstances are received, there
-are proportionally more patients with paralysis than
-at Bicetre, the population of which is composed of
-men, belonging to the poorest classes of society.</p>
-
-<p>We have only to consider the phenomena which
-attend and usually follow the venereal act, to infer
-that the spinal marrow may frequently be affected in
-consequence of the abuse of that act. Agitation, the
-involuntary contractions of the muscles, particularly
-of those surrounding the pelvis, and the tetanic spasm
-with which they are affected at the time of the ejaculation
-of the semen; the cramps which frequently attend it;
-the general feeling of pain, fatigue, and debility, which
-follows it&mdash;a feeling which is always more perceptible
-in the loins and lower part of the body, than elsewhere,
-indicate the powerful impression made on the
-spinal marrow, and the part which it takes in all going
-on. This participation is also demonstrated by different
-pathological facts, and by the results of experiments
-which we shall mention, when treating of the influence
-exercised by affections of the spinal marrow, as the
-cause of venereal excesses.</p>
-
-<p>The local symptoms of the medulla, in onanists,
-consist in different and more or less acute sensations
-felt along the vertebral column. At first, these sensations
-do not appear until after the act of venery, and
-pass off; they then continue a longer time; and finally
-become constant. The pain is generally of a dull
-character&mdash;inconvenient, rather than severe&mdash;which
-obliges the patient, when sitting or standing, to change
-his position frequently; and it is generally less perceptible,
-or even disappears, when the patient assumes
-a horizontal position. Sometimes there is a feeling as
-if of ants crawling over the body, descending from the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">86</span>
-head along the spine: this symptom was first noticed
-by Hippocrates. Sometimes, these sensations have a
-special character, which each patient expresses in his
-own manner: thus, a man who indulged night and
-morning, for two years, in coition, complained to me
-that he felt beatings constantly between his shoulders.
-Others say that they have a knot in the back. The
-pains in the spine are sometimes very severe; sometimes
-they are extremely sharp. Onanists, and individuals
-affected with pollutions, most generally complain
-of their loins.</p>
-
-<p>The frequent occurrence of the symptoms mentioned
-in persons exhausted by venereal excesses, has caused
-the terms <i>consumption</i>, phthisis dorsalis, and tabes
-dorsalis, to be applied to the state which they then
-present.</p>
-
-<p>The other symptoms of the affection of the spinal
-marrow are more or less severe pains&mdash;more or less
-distinct sensations of cold, of numbness, and formication
-in the limbs, particularly in the lower extremities;
-cramps; constant trembling, or convulsive motions
-in these parts; a kind of tetanic stiffness; gradual
-debility of the lower half of the body; and, finally,
-paraplegia. We shall find these symptoms, in addition
-to the other effects of masturbation, in cases to be mentioned.</p>
-
-<p>Pains in the loins and extremities were very marked
-in an individual of whom Serrurier remarks as follows:&mdash;“A
-patient whom I attended was reduced to a
-most dreadful state of marasmus, in consequence of
-nocturnal pollutions, determined by venereal excesses.
-I prescribed a tonic mode of treatment, and varied it
-in every form; but the patient died, after four months
-of frightful pains in the loins and articulations.” There
-was apparently, in this case, an affection of the lumbar
-part of the medulla, or of its membranes. A similar
-malady existed, probably, in a man whose case was
-published by Hatt&egrave;, and who was affected, in consequence
-of excesses in coition, with a lumbago, which
-alternated with satyriasis. There is no doubt, in regard
-to the affection of the spinal marrow, in the following
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">87</span>
-case related by Van Swieten:&mdash;“For three
-years” says he, “I used all the aids of medicine for a
-young man, who, in consequence of onanism, was
-affected with general wandering pains&mdash;with a sensation,
-sometimes of heat, sometimes of cold, which was
-extremely unpleasant, over the whole body, but particularly
-in the loins. After a time, these pains diminished
-slightly; and then the thighs and legs were
-so cold, that although these parts, on being touched,
-seemed to preserve their natural heat, yet he was constantly
-warming himself at the fire, even during the
-warmer days of summer. I observed, particularly, a
-constant rotation of the testicles in the scrotum; and
-the patient felt a similar motion in the loins, which
-was very troublesome to him.”</p>
-
-<p>Was the spinal marrow perfectly healthy in the
-onanist who wrote to Tissot the following:&mdash;“My
-nerves are extremely weak. My hands have no
-strength: they tremble constantly, and perspire freely.
-I have violent pains in my stomach, arms, and legs;
-and sometimes in the kidneys, chest,” &amp;c. Persuaded,
-also, from a great many cases, that most of the pains
-termed rheumatic are neuralgic, and that many neuralgias
-depend on an affection of the spinal marrow;
-I think there is reason to suspect this affection, whenever
-it is found in onanists.</p>
-
-<p>The following case, related by Dr. Bertini of Turin,
-presents, as a principal symptom, convulsive trembling
-of the lower extremities. The disease commenced, as
-is frequently the case, under the influence of an accidental
-cause; but when this had occurred, the patient
-presented for a long time symptoms of an affection of
-the medulla; and it is evident that their origin must
-be ascribed to onanism.</p>
-
-<p>The patient was twenty-eight years old, and of a
-lymphatic-bilious temperament. When twelve years
-of age, he became addicted to masturbation, and then
-began to perceive tremblings in the arms and legs,
-vertigo, and pains in the head. He continued his fatal
-habit till twenty-two years old. At the beginning of
-August, 1824, he was attacked with a tertian intermittent,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">88</span>
-but for this he took no medicine. On the 20th
-of the same month, while cutting wood in Sesia, and
-while in a profuse perspiration, he went in swimming.
-He soon felt a sensation of shivering, followed by cold,
-spasms, vertigo, pain in the head, and thirst; aversion
-to food, difficulty of respiration, sensation of oppression
-in the sacrolumbar region, constipation, pains, and
-trembling in the lower extremities. These latter
-symptoms became so urgent, that the patient was
-obliged to have advice. In this state, he was carried
-to the hospital of Vercelli; and in a few days he was
-bled eleven times, and drastic purgatives were administered
-without success. A month afterward, he left
-the hospital; and since that time, the man has become
-a beggar and an object of public commiseration. The
-18th of October, at which time he came under the
-charge of Dr. Bertini, he presented the following
-symptoms: he had no fever, nor pains in the head, nor
-derangement in the intellectual faculties; but he had
-a pain in the two sides of the sacrolumbar region,
-which was increased by pressure. The patient complained,
-also, of a kind of formication in the legs and
-feet, which parts, as also the rest of the body, trembled
-constantly: the agitation was so great, that the
-patient could not rest in bed, nor sit without support.
-Twenty-five leeches were applied to the lumbar region,
-and these drew about twelve ounces of blood.
-The trembling diminished, and the patient could soon
-rise and walk without a stick, and in fact without assistance.
-From this time, he felt no pains nor trembling,
-and he left the hospital eight days afterward.
-Dr. Bertini has since seen him, and he was well.
-(<i>Revue Med.</i>, Dec. 1825.)</p>
-
-<p>The tetanic form of the disease of the spinal marrow
-has rarely been observed as arising from onanism.
-Tissot saw a case of it in a young man:&mdash;“The disease
-commenced with rigidity of the neck and spine;
-this extended successively to all the limbs; and the
-patient, for some time before death, was obliged to lie
-in bed on his face, unable to move either his feet or
-hands. All motion was impossible; and he was
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">89</span>
-obliged even to be fed. He lived several weeks in
-this sad state; and died, or rather sunk away, almost
-without suffering.”</p>
-
-<p>Paralysis, which is the consequence of myelitis, or
-of any other affection of the spinal marrow, has been
-seen much more frequently than tetanus, in onanists.
-It is most generally confined to the lower parts of the
-body; but if the disease be seated in the cervical
-portion of the spinal marrow, the four extremities may
-be paralyzed. This was seen in the case of a young
-man who was under the care of Dupuytren, in September,
-1833:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>This young man was twenty years old: he was
-very much addicted to masturbation, and his disease
-could be attributed to no other cause. This affection
-had existed for two years, when the patient entered
-Hotel Dieu. The attack of paralysis had been sudden,
-like a clap of thunder: the patient had lost the use of
-his limbs suddenly. The muscles of the neck were
-paralyzed, and the head fell in any direction: a short
-time before, however, the patient had recovered the
-power of sustaining it. The paralysis of the four
-limbs, also, varied in degree, alternately increasing
-and diminishing. After the patient entered the hospital,
-it was not equal on both sides: thus, he had some
-power over his left arm, but not over his right arm.
-Both the upper limbs, also, were atrophied, or wasted:
-those of the right side more so, however, than those
-of the left. Many remedies had been tried for this
-patient, but without success. At the time the case
-was published, purgatives and moxas were proposed.
-Dupuytren remarked to his pupils, that the situation
-of the myelitis corresponded in this young man to the
-cervical vertebr&aelig;; and that, if it ascended a little, and
-extended to the origin of the diaphragmatic nerve, it
-would cause death. He regarded the passion for masturbation,
-which existed in this young man, as the
-probable cause of this myelitis; and, consequently, of
-an atrophy of the anterior roots of the spinal nerves.
-(<i>Lancette Fran&ccedil;aise</i>, 1833, p. 339.)</p>
-
-<p>The disorganization, also, occupied an elevated portion
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">90</span>
-of the spinal marrow, in the following case stated
-by Tissot:&mdash;“I was called upon,” says he, “to visit in
-the country a man, forty years old, who had been very
-strong and robust, but who had indulged excessively
-in sexual commerce and in wine, and who had been
-often engaged in athletic exercises. He began to be
-affected, a few months since, by a weakness in his
-legs, which made him totter in his walk, as if drunk.
-He sometimes fell, when walking on a plane; he
-could not descend the stairs without much difficulty;
-and hardly dared to leave his apartment. His hands
-trembled very much; he wrote with very great difficulty,
-and very badly; but he dictated with ease, although
-his speech, which had never been very fluent,
-began to be less so. His memory was still good; and
-the only ground for suspecting a lesion in his mind
-was the want of attention at the <i>jeu de dames</i>, and
-the change of countenance. His appetite was good,
-and he slept well; but it was difficult for him to turn
-in bed.</p>
-
-<p>It occurred to me that his gallantries, and a too free
-use of wine, were the first causes of the disease; and
-that his athletic exercises, in which he had been frequently
-engaged, were the origin of the particular
-affection of the muscles. The season was not favorable
-for the use of remedies; but it was necessary to
-attempt to arrest the progress of the disease. I advised
-frictions of the whole body with flannels, and
-some tonics. I directed the doses to be increased, and
-to add also the use of the cold bath, at the commencement
-of summer. In a few weeks, the trembling of
-the hands seemed to be a little diminished. A consultation
-was had in the month of April: the disease
-was attributed to his having written some months,
-two years since, in a chamber recently plastered.
-Warm baths&mdash;oily frictions, with diaphoretic and anti-spasmodic
-powders, were employed without benefit.
-In the month of June, in a second consultation, he was
-advised to visit the medicinal spring of Leuk, in Valais.
-On his return, the trembling and stiffness had increased.
-From this time, (Sept. 1760, to Jan. 1764,) I saw him
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">91</span>
-but three or four times. In 1762, he procured from
-Frankfort the remedies mentioned in the English treatise,
-<i>Onania</i>, which were of no use. He consulted a
-foreign physician the last year with as little success.
-The disease has slowly, but daily progressed; and for
-several months before death, his legs were too weak
-to support the weight of his body. He could not move
-his hands nor arms without help; his speech was so
-embarrassed, and his voice so feeble, that it was difficult
-to understand him; the extensor muscles of the
-head allowed it to fall continually on the chest; he
-had constant pains in the loins; his sleep and appetite
-were sensibly diminished. During the last few months
-of his life, there was much difficulty in swallowing;
-after Christmas, there came on an irregular fever, and
-his eyes were singularly dim; when I saw him in the
-month of January, he passed the whole day and most
-of the night reclining on a sofa, with his feet in a
-chair, with a domestic constantly in attendance near
-him, in order to change his position, raise his head to
-feed him, and to listen attentively to all he said. As
-he approached the period of his dissolution, he was
-obliged to articulate letter by letter, which was written
-down as it was pronounced. Seeing that I gave him
-no encouragement, as I only employed some palliatives
-for his fever and oppression, and actuated by a desire
-of living, he sent one of his friends to tell me the
-cause to which he attributed all these symptoms, viz.,
-<i>masturbation</i>; that he commenced this infamous
-practice several years since; had continued it as long
-as possible; and that he had perceived his difficulties
-increase, in proportion to his indulgence in it. He
-confirmed this statement a few days afterward; and
-it was this which induced him to use the remedies
-recommended in <i>Onania</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>This case shows us paralysis confined at first to the
-abdominal limbs, but extending afterward to the upper
-part of the body. We find a similar case of this progression,
-in a case related by Olivier, of Angers:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“M&mdash;, of a sanguine temperament, of a strong constitution,
-and of a lively and gay character, had always
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">92</span>
-enjoyed good health until seventeen years old, when
-he unfortunately became addicted to masturbation.
-He soon languished, and grew debilitated. Having,
-however, conquered this fatal habit, his strength gradually
-returned, and a proper regimen soon restored him
-to his former vigor. When twenty years old, he perceived
-a marked debility in the motions of the articulation
-of the right foot; but this disappeared: he was
-then affected twice with blenorrhagia, the last attack
-of which continued for several months.</p>
-
-<p>“When twenty-five years old, he again indulged in
-masturbation, and similar symptoms to those first presented
-soon appeared: the lower extremities, also, became
-weakened; at times, also, the sensibility of the
-skin was obtuse, and even lost; but it soon reappeared.
-Under the influence of remedies, the weakness in the
-limbs diminished slightly. M&mdash; could walk three
-quarters of an hour without resting, but he could not
-stand longer; his legs, which were evidently wasted,
-refusing to sustain him. He was extremely costive;
-and since the last attack of blenorrhagia, the excretion
-of urine was painful.</p>
-
-<p>“This affection remained stationary for several
-years, and then became more serious: the patient was
-now twenty-nine years old. At this period, the paraplegia
-became complete. He could not walk, nor even
-support himself on crutches; his lower limbs were
-often stiff; both arms, also, were at times insensible;
-and sometimes the sense of touch was blunted. The
-wasting away had increased; the excretion of urine
-was often involuntary, and the constipation was habitual.
-He was somewhat benefited by Hall&eacute;’s prescriptions,
-consisting in frictions with cantharides, and
-douches to the spine; but the next year the evil increased,
-the sensibility in the hands diminished, and
-there was difficulty in moving the right hand.</p>
-
-<p>“Eighteen months afterward, the lower extremities
-became perfectly paralyzed: they were less warm than
-the rest of the body; yet, when cold water was applied
-to them, it produced a burning sensation. The right
-arm, forearm, and hand, often felt fatigue: its motions
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">93</span>
-were less free, and the patient sometimes found it difficult
-to write. The limb of the opposite side was not
-affected. The disease of the bladder, which had existed
-for several years, was also increased.</p>
-
-<p>“Paralysis, during the following years, progressed
-slowly, but constantly. The arm of the right side lost
-its motion entirely; the forearm was flexed upon it,
-and retained this position. At a later period, the fingers
-became stiff, crooked, and they continued to be so
-flexed, that a tampon of linen was placed on the palm
-of the hand, to prevent the nails from lacerating the
-skin. A singular symptom, also, appeared: if the internal
-part of the thigh was gently rubbed, the limbs
-extended quickly, as if by a galvanic shock, and then
-resumed their first position, which was that of a permanent
-state of semiflexion.</p>
-
-<p>The paralysis finally affected the left upper extremity,
-which had hitherto been free from it; at the same
-time, the respiration became more difficult, the voice
-more feeble, and speech more painful, so that the patient
-choked, after talking a few moments. These
-different symptoms, and those described above, gradually
-became intense; and at the time this case was
-recorded, the patient was still alive&mdash;but in a most
-lamentable situation. Very severe pains supervened
-in the right side; the limbs were frequently convulsed;
-the constipation was obstinate; the urine passed involuntarily;
-the intellectual faculties, however, remained
-unaffected; and the patient, who was then fifty years
-old, proved, by his easy and agreeable conversation,
-that, notwithstanding his unfortunate situation, he had
-lost none of his natural gayety of character.” (<i>Trait&eacute;
-de la moelle epini&egrave;re</i>, &amp;c., vol. ii., p. 594.)</p>
-
-<p>The lower part of the medulla alone was affected
-in an individual whose case is mentioned by Tissot.</p>
-
-<p>In another case related by Weszpremi, the spinal
-marrow and brain were affected. The patient, who
-was thirty years old, complained of pains along the
-spine, especially when he stooped. His legs were so
-weak, that he could scarcely stand erect for a moment;
-his memory was considerably weakened, and he seemed
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">94</span>
-stupid; his sight was also affected, and he was extremely
-thin. This man, having long denied the cause
-of his disease, finally confessed it. After some months,
-his health was restored. (<i>Observ. Med.</i>, p. 175.)</p>
-
-<p>The disease is not always confined to the spinal
-marrow, and its membranes: it frequently extends to
-the parts adjacent, and particularly to the vertebr&aelig;.
-The latter are then destroyed; and the disease described
-by Pott, and which takes his name, appears.
-Sabatier was aware of the influence of masturbation
-on the bony part of the vertebral column. “The
-most terrible and most frequent results of onanism,”
-says he, in a letter to M. A. Petit, “are nodosities of
-the spine. My opinion has always been regarded as
-unfounded, on account of the youth of the patients;
-but I was enlightened by the admission of some of
-my patients, that many were guilty of this thing before
-their sixteenth year.” This fact, which was afterward
-stated by Boyer, in his lectures, is now no longer
-doubted. The relation, however, between the caries
-of the bodies of the vertebr&aelig; in onanists, and the
-affection of the medulla, or of its membranes, had
-not been observed; it had not been remarked that this
-latter always precedes caries, which in this case is
-only the result of the extension of the primitive disease.
-The facts which are to be stated will prove this
-to be true.</p>
-
-<p>L. E. G., twenty-one years old, a turner, of a lymphatic
-temperament, of a slender and delicate constitution,
-addicted to masturbation from childhood, experienced,
-at the beginning of February, 1825, a slight
-pain in the epigastric region, difficulty of digestion,
-and constipation: he also had laborious breathing,
-caused by palpitations, which were much increased by
-walking, and particularly by going up stairs.</p>
-
-<p>On entering the hospital la Piti&eacute;, April 28th,
-1825, this young man presented all the symptoms of a
-hypertrophy of the left cavities of the heart: these
-phenomena, which diminished after a few days, were
-followed by symptoms of enteritis and peritonitis,
-which were attributed to excesses in eating. During
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">95</span>
-the continuance of this latter affection, the patient
-complained of uncommon debility in the abdominal
-limbs. These symptoms disappeared; and when it
-was expected to see the patient convalescent, he was
-affected with complete paraplegia. He lost the use of
-his legs: they, however, retained their sensibility.
-As motion in them was lost, this sensibility was even
-increased; for the patient cried whenever he was
-touched, or when the position of the lower limbs was
-changed. The bladder was soon paralyzed, and the
-sound was used, which caused inflammation of this organ.
-A broad and deep eschar, followed by ulceration,
-laid bare the whole posterior part of the pelvis.
-From this time, the symptoms increased more and
-more, and the patient died the 11th of August, about
-six weeks after the first symptoms appeared.</p>
-
-<p>On opening the body, a softened tubercle was found
-on the surface of the right hemisphere of the brain;
-<i>the body of the third dorsal vertebra was slightly
-changed</i>; the corresponding portion of the dura mater
-presented a cancerous degenerescence, which extended
-from the body of the third dorsal to that of the
-fifth cervical vertebra. The bodies of all the vertebr&aelig;
-connected with this alteration were whitish, and
-slightly softened. The tissue of the spinal marrow
-was softened, especially on the level with the seventh
-cervical and first three dorsal vertebr&aelig;: the softening
-occupied the anterior cords, which were of a grayish
-white color; the posterior cords were slightly softened
-but only on a level with the first three dorsal vertebr&aelig;
-The lungs were healthy and crepitating; the right
-contained superiorly a small softened tubercle. <i>The
-heart was healthy</i>: its size was normal; the left cavities
-possessed their usual size and thickness. Traces
-of inflammation were found in the peritoneum, intestines,
-and bladder. (<i>Journal de Physiol. Experim.</i>
-July, 1825.)</p>
-
-<p>In this case, we see in a measure the mode in which
-caries of the vertebr&aelig; is produced. This caries is only
-at its commencement; the vertebr&aelig; are affected superficially,
-and in those parts only which correspond to
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">96</span>
-the diseased portions of the dura mater and medulla.
-There are none of the local symptoms of Pott’s disease&mdash;no
-collapse of the vertebral column&mdash;no gibbosity;
-yet the paraplegia appeared, as in the cases where
-these alterations exist: it resulted, then, from the softening
-of the medulla, or the alteration of its membranes.
-If a little time had elapsed, and several spinous
-processes had deviated from their true direction,
-this paralysis would have been attributed to the commencement
-and progress of this deviation. These
-relations between the state of the medulla and that of
-the vertebr&aelig; have been already remarked by several
-authors. M. Latour, in a memoir inserted among
-those of the Society of Emulation, has sought to
-establish that paraplegia, in Pott’s disease, resulted
-from a primitive alteration of the medulla. Janson
-has since expressed a similar opinion. Cases have
-also been published by Louis, which leave little doubt
-on this subject. (<i>Mem. and Recherches</i>, 1826, p. 410.)</p>
-
-<p>One symptom in the preceding case, which deserves
-to be noted, is the difficulty of respiration, the palpitations,
-and other symptoms which led to the belief that
-the heart was diseased. On opening the body, however,
-this organ was found perfectly healthy. Similar
-phenomena are often seen in onanists: it would therefore
-be wrong to consider them always as signs of an
-organic alteration of the heart and large vessels.</p>
-
-<p>In the following case, the vertebr&aelig; were more
-changed. The spinal column was gibbous: but this
-was preceded by paraplegia, and other symptoms of
-myelitis. This case was published by M. Dalandeterie:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>A shoemaker, twenty-four years old, of good constitution,
-who has always enjoyed good health, contracted
-the habit of masturbation at the age of sixteen years,
-and became so addicted to it, that he indulged seven
-or eight times a-day: his strength soon diminished,
-and he lost flesh and his color.</p>
-
-<p>After an interruption, caused by an acute disease,
-the patient resumed his fatal habit with the same earnestness.
-He finally became so weak; languid, and
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">97</span>
-pale, that he was discharged from military service, in
-which he was inscribed.</p>
-
-<p>A little while afterward, this young man, who had
-never shown any symptoms of scrofula, presented
-scrofulous engorgements in the groins and axill&aelig;, and
-swellings, with caries, in several phalanges of the fingers.
-At the same time, a singular phenomenon appeared:
-the hair, which was chestnut colored, came
-off; on growing again, it appeared of several colors:
-but after coming off once or twice, it resumed its natural
-shade.</p>
-
-<p>The patient continuing to indulge in onanism, finally
-became extremely weak, and was obliged to keep his
-bed. Marked symptoms of myelitis now appeared.
-The patient gradually lost the use of his lower limbs:
-first they became weak, and showed a disposition to
-be crossed; but finally wasted away, and lost the
-power of motion. He was now obliged even to be
-turned in bed, as he could not move. The articulation
-of the feet and knees became stiff and inflexible, and
-his legs were so much retracted, that the end of the
-foot only touched the ground, when the patient was
-placed in an erect position. The sensibility of the
-limbs, also, was as much affected as their motions;
-they were cold, numb, and even when pinched they
-were not painful. The general languor was increased
-every day. He suffered from thirst, dyspepsia, pains
-in the stomach, rumblings, night sweats, &amp;c. At this
-period, the patient quitted a woman with whom he
-had lived for a year, and who, having but little inclination
-for coition, caused him to indulge in masturbation.</p>
-
-<p>The erections were frequent, powerful, short, and
-always terminated with a more or less abundant discharge
-of mucus from the urethra&mdash;perhaps, also from
-the prostate gland; or even the discharge might be
-of thin semen. After a while, the ejaculations were
-composed, instead of semen, of a half-clotted, blackish
-or yellowish blood: sometimes, as much as a tablespoonful
-was lost. These emissions were always painful,
-and were followed by extreme prostration.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_98">98</span></p>
-
-<p>For some time, the patient was in this sad state,
-when he experienced a crawling sensation, like that
-caused by ants, descending along the back: he experienced,
-in the same region, a severe and fatiguing
-pain, which extended into the ribs and loins. These
-symptoms subsided; but at the lower part of the dorsal
-region appeared a hard tumor, which at first was small;
-but it gradually enlarged, as long as the patient continued
-to masturbate. This tumor was evidently
-formed by the curve of the spine, and the projection
-of three spinous processes.</p>
-
-<p>In three months, the patient was improved by the
-use of moxas and of antiscrofulous remedies, by a
-suitable regimen, and particularly by abstaining from
-onanism, for which he had conceived not only disgust,
-but even a horror. The abdominal limbs regained
-their strength, heat, and sensibility; the patient could
-walk on crutches, and could even stand erect for a
-few moments, and could take a few steps unaided.</p>
-
-<p>In this case, which is remarkable in more than one
-respect, the symptoms of myelitis preceded the curve
-of the spine, and then disappeared, although the spine
-did not regain its primitive rectitude. The debility,
-numbness, retraction, and paralysis of the limbs, appeared
-long before the pain in the back, after which
-the curve in the back began to appear; and then these
-limbs regained their sensibility, force, and motion,
-while the gibbosity remained always the same. This
-curve, then, could not be the cause of the paraplegia,
-because the latter appeared first, and the spine remained
-curved after the paralysis was removed. The development
-of symptoms apparently scrofulous, in a man
-more than twenty years old, who had hitherto presented
-nothing analogous, and whose parents were
-healthy; the loss of his hair; the affection of the
-seminal passages, and the state of the genital organs,
-&amp;c., &amp;c.&mdash;facts to which we shall recur hereafter&mdash;all
-contribute to render this case interesting.</p>
-
-<p>We shall see, in the following case, also related by
-M. Dalandeterie, an instance of vertebral caries in an
-onanist:&mdash;
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">99</span></p>
-
-<p>A cook, forty-five years old, of bad constitution, but
-having always enjoyed robust health, indulged in masturbation,
-although not to very great excess. Eighteen
-months before his case was published, he perceived
-pains and weakness in the loins, frequent colics, often
-followed by brownish dejections, and sometimes by
-obstinate constipation. He suffered, too, from flatulency;
-and in the left haunch there was a pain, which
-increased or diminished with this flatulence.</p>
-
-<p>The patient, notwithstanding the progress of these
-symptoms, continued to masturbate. Debility and
-pains in his loins extended into the abdominal limbs,
-and increased so much, that he was obliged to keep
-his bed: he could only lie on his left side; but in this
-position his motions were easy. The diminution in
-the natural heat, the livid color of the skin, the softness
-and flaccidity of the flesh, debility, loss of sleep
-and of flesh, thirst, constipation, &amp;c., were added to
-the symptoms already mentioned.</p>
-
-<p>At the same time, a hard, indolent tumor, the size
-of a pullet’s egg, was formed at the lower part of the
-dorsal region. This tumor, which did not enlarge,
-evidently resulted from the prominence of the spinous
-processes, and consequently from a curve in the spine,
-which was doubtless caused by a softening of the
-bodies of the vertebr&aelig;.</p>
-
-<p>Nearly at the same period, there was developed, at
-the lower part of the sternum, a hard, indolent tumor;
-the color of the skin was unchanged: it gradually became
-the size of a nut, suppurated, and assumed the
-appearance of a scrofulous ulcer. The lymphatic
-ganglions of the neck, which were somewhat swelled,
-now returned to their natural size. The treatment
-was similar to that used in the former case, and was
-attended with the same result: the strength, bodily
-heat, and appetite returned. Finally, the patient was
-able to walk with crutches; and could stand, unsupported,
-for a few moments.</p>
-
-<p>The circumstances in this case are not detailed with
-sufficient accuracy, to enable us to follow exactly the
-cause of the symptoms. We would remark, however,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">100</span>
-that one of these seen first was the neuralgic pains,
-which extended from the loins into the lower extremities.
-Now, as this symptom belongs to irritation of
-the medulla or its membranes, more than to their compression,
-there is reason to think that this irritation
-preceded the curve of the spine. In this patient, also,
-as in the preceding case, the affection of the marrow
-had not so much influence in causing the destruction
-of the bodies of the vertebr&aelig;, as a disposition to caries&mdash;a
-disposition which was evidently increased by
-onanism, and which appeared at the same time in
-several bones.</p>
-
-<p>The following case, from Meyrieu, is not sufficiently
-detailed, to affect in any manner the question, how
-caries of the vertebr&aelig; is produced in onanists; but it
-is interesting, as it shows that the disease may extend
-to the soft parts which cover or are adjacent to the
-affected vertebr&aelig;.</p>
-
-<p>L&mdash;, twenty-two years old, was moderately tall,
-with a narrow chest, and had never enjoyed good
-health, particularly for the six years preceding the
-time when he entered the prison at Bicetre, when he
-indulged in the disgusting practice of onanism. In
-the course of January, 1819, he was affected with general
-numbness, with frequent cough and expectoration
-of mucus: these symptoms were occasionally attended
-with slight fever. When admitted to the infirmary,
-the 1st of February, he complained, in addition to the
-symptoms already mentioned, of a violent pain in the
-posterior part of the neck. A slight swelling was seen
-at the level of the first and second cervical vertebr&aelig;,
-and pressure on that part was painful; the head was
-bent to the left side, and remained motionless; the
-thoracic abdominal limbs were numb; and deglutition
-was painful. Local resolvent frictions, blisters,
-and moxas were used. The 15th of February, he was
-affected with hemoptysis, which yielded in two days
-to the use of bleeding and astringents. The vertebral
-disease, however, generally made progress, like that
-of the chest, which seemed to relax. In July, the
-thoracic limbs were perfectly paralyzed; and in August,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">101</span>
-this was true also of the abdominal limbs. At
-this period, the head was absolutely immoveable; the
-phthisis seemed as yet in the second degree. Finally,
-the patient died suddenly, from moving his head, while
-the attendants were changing him.</p>
-
-<p><i>Post-mortem Examination.</i> The soft parts of the
-posterior region of the neck were changed to a whitish,
-lardaceous substance; the right condyle of the occipital
-bone was carious: there was also a deep caries of
-the upper part of the right lateral mass of the first
-vertebr&aelig;, and of the odontoid process. The transverse
-and odontoid ligaments were degenerated and softened;
-and the medulla oblongata presented a kind of
-strangulation, resulting from the compression caused
-by the left posterior part of the edge of the occipital
-foramen: in fact, there was a dislocation of this bone,
-on the first vertebr&aelig;. The cerebrum was unaffected;
-the right lung was tuberculous, and very small; that
-of the left side was also tuberculous, but was larger.
-The peritoneum presented some marks of inflammation.</p>
-
-<p>In the preceding cases, the caries of the vertebr&aelig;
-was not attended with a congested abscess. The following
-case, published by Lev&ecirc;que Lasource, will present
-to us this symptom, which is so common in this
-disease:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>N&mdash; O&mdash; was addicted to onanism, from twelve to
-eighteen years of age; but could not renounce this
-fatal habit, although reminded of its danger by a curve
-in the spine, and by other symptoms. When received
-at la Charit&eacute; Hospital, in 1806, beside a well marked
-gibbosity, he presented a congested abscess at the
-upper and inner part of the thigh. Two cauteries
-were applied to the sides of the vertebral prominences:
-these suppurated freely, but did no good. The abscess
-was punctured in several places. This young man,
-who could not survive, left the hospital; so that the
-organic changes produced by his disease could not be
-verified. (<i>Jour. de Med., Chir. and Phar.</i>; vol. xvii.,
-p. 261.)</p>
-
-<p>The same author has related another case, which
-terminated more fortunately:&mdash;A child, seven or eight
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">102</span>
-years old, addicted to masturbation, entered at la Charit&eacute;,
-affected with gibbosity and paralysis of the lower
-limbs. During the month he stayed in the hospital,
-several cauteries were applied around the tumor, which
-suppurated; tonics and strengthening medicines were
-administered internally. He left, perfectly cured of
-the paralysis, and of the other symptoms caused by
-the affection of the medulla; but the deformity resulting
-from the prominence formed by the spinous processes
-of the vertebr&aelig; continued. Three years after,
-this child, who had abstained from this bad habit, had
-experienced no relapse.</p>
-
-<p>We have seen, in several of the preceding cases,
-that permanent contractions of the lower limbs resulted,
-in onanists, from affections of the spinal marrow.
-Guersent, also, admits the possibility of essential
-contractions&mdash;that is, those which do not result from
-a disease of the nervous centres. According to this
-practitioner, these kinds of contractions are seen most
-frequently in those nervous children who indulge in
-bad habits, like that of masturbation. The following
-case has been considered by him as an instance of this
-affection:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>D&mdash; E&mdash;, five years old, and addicted to masturbation,
-after passing a part of the winter at the Hospital
-des Enfans, to be treated for scrofulous engorgements
-of the glands of the neck, was sent to the country in
-the spring. He had been there about three months,
-when he was suddenly affected with a contraction of
-the lower extremities. Examined the 5th of July, he
-complained neither of pain in the head nor spine.
-The digestive passages were in very good state; there
-was no derangement in the circulation or respiration;
-the muscles of the lower extremities were permanently
-rigid: the tension, however, was more marked in the
-adductors; for the patient constantly kept his knees
-crossed. There was no deviation in the vertebral
-column. Different remedies were employed, but without
-success; except a little improvement under the
-use of carbonate of iron. The legs and thighs of the
-patient could be flexed and extended with the hands;
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">103</span>
-but he could neither flex them when extended, nor extend
-them when flexed. This child was cured in a
-singular manner. His state was as described, when,
-at the beginning of September, he was affected
-with symptoms of roseola. The contraction of the
-lower extremities disappeared, when the fever came
-on. The eruption went through its course, and the
-contraction of the limbs did not return. Thus, this
-disease, which had resisted several efficacious remedies,
-disappeared before another disease.</p>
-
-<p>The loss or debility of the external senses, particularly
-those of hearing and sight, when this state is
-the consequence of venereal excesses, often result, as
-may be seen in several of the cases above stated, from
-a disease of the brain. This organ was probably diseased
-in the old man whose case was mentioned by
-R&eacute;veill&eacute; Parise. This man was desirous of living
-with a young Italian girl, whose temperament was
-extremely ardent. He paid for his imprudence by
-blindness, which occurred in eight days, and which
-was followed by death. Sometimes, however, the
-eye alone is diseased: at least, the pathological state
-which it presents is unattended by any symptoms indicating
-an affection of the brain or its membranes.
-Many libertines present only an irritation of the conjunctiva
-and of the edge of the eyelids. It is a sort
-of chronic ophthalmia; their eyes are red, watery, fatigued,
-painful; and they cannot engage in the evening
-in any occupation, such as reading, which requires
-the attention to be confined to one object. Sometimes,
-a severe and deep-seated pain proves that, beside the
-outer parts of the eye, the interior of this organ is the
-seat of a severe irritation. Hoffmann has seen several
-cases of this. He cites that of a young man, who indulged
-in onanism from the age of fifteen to that of
-twenty-three. “His eyes and head were so weak,”
-says he, “that these organs were often affected with
-violent spasms, during the emission of semen. Whenever
-he attempted to read, he experienced a sensation
-similar to that of drunkenness: the pupil was considerably
-dilated, and excessive pains were felt in the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">104</span>
-eye. The eyelids were glued together every night;
-the eyes were also watery; and there was, at the two
-angles, a collection of whitish matter. These irritations,
-especially when seated within the eye, may be
-followed by the loss of sight.” Dr. Juengken, professor
-of clinical ophthalmology at the Berlin faculty, and
-who has published an excellent work on the diseases
-of the eye, indicates, when speaking of amaurosis resulting
-from masturbation, that the pupil assumes a
-peculiar form, which is found only (says this professor)
-in those individuals habitually addicted to this vice.
-In these cases, the pupil, instead of being in the centre
-of the eye, is removed upward, but does not lose
-its roundness: the upper part of the iris seems narrower,
-and contracted on its ciliary edge. This symptom
-has been mentioned, also, by Dr. Sichel, as
-occurring in certain scrofulous ophthalmias: iritis then
-exists. Photophobia, which is a greater or less aversion
-to light, resulting from the pain which it occasions
-in the eye, has been indicated, by Sanson, as sometimes
-preceding amaurosis, caused by too frequent a
-loss of semen.</p>
-
-<p>All authors agree in placing venereal excesses, and
-particularly those from masturbation, among the causes
-of amaurosis. They are so unanimous on this point,
-that we shall cite no authorities. They generally
-agree to regard amaurosis, in onanists, as produced by
-the exhaustion caused by diurnal or nocturnal pollutions.
-Beer, and many others, assimilate, in this respect,
-the loss of semen to that of other fluids; and
-compares venereal excesses, especially those from
-onanism, with cholera, diarrhœa, &amp;c., as a cause of
-amaurosis. This idea of exhaustion probably led
-Scarpa to remark, that amaurosis, resulting from premature
-abuses of masturbation or coition, must generally
-be regarded as incurable. This prognosis may
-be made, we believe, in regard to most cases of amaurosis.
-Dr. Buzzi has published, with four other cases
-of amaurosis, which were cured, that of an individual
-in whom it had been produced by masturbation. It,
-however, yielded, on the abandonment of bad habits,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">105</span>
-to the moderate use of good wine, combined with
-milk diet.</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Rognetta, in a memoir on the causes of amaurosis,
-insists on the opinion that onanism produces
-this disease, by exhausting the sensibility of the body.
-He compares this habit to decay. “Nothing,” says
-he, “enervates the body so much as too frequent emissions
-of semen, especially when they are caused by
-the hand: the spasm which attends them throws the
-body into all the infirmities of old age. The retina
-and optic nerve then gradually lose their sensitive
-faculty, which finally becomes extinct. Those who
-masturbate are affected with amaurosis, like decrepit
-old men.” Rognetta adds, that he has the notes of
-several cases of amaurosis, which had resisted all remedies,
-and which were caused entirely by the <i>luxuria
-manuensis</i>. He relates the history of a young ecclesiastic,
-nineteen years old, a native of Palermo, whose
-sight became very weak. This unfortunate young
-man had been in the habit of masturbating seven times
-a-day: he was also prone to sodomy. Rognetta advised
-him to leave off this bad habit, and to return to
-his native place and take cold baths.</p>
-
-<p>Sanson, also, places voluntary and involuntary pollutions
-among the asthenic causes of amaurosis: he,
-however, regards these pollutions as sometimes causing
-irritation of the retina. He assimilates them, as
-do many other authors, to all abundant discharges of
-fluids. The following case has been considered by
-him as one of asthenic amaurosis, produced in this
-manner:&mdash;A notary’s clerk, twenty-four years old, experienced
-for a year a progressive debility in his sight.
-He had labored much at night, by lamp-light, and
-attributed his disease to this cause; but another, which
-had contributed to the development of the amaurosis,
-was the excesses of this young man, in onanism and
-coition. Venereal disease, which he had contracted,
-might also contribute to this bad result. The pupil
-was dilated; the iris was immoveable; the eye was
-perfectly clear; and the retina, of a dull color, could
-be seen through the pupil. An antivenereal treatment,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">106</span>
-purgatives, emetics, and blisters around the organ, &amp;c.,
-produced no effect.</p>
-
-<p>In my opinion, blindness from amaurosis, being not
-so much a disease as a symptom, or rather the consequence,
-of many other diseases, is not, in onanists,
-the result of exhaustion, of asthenia, any more than
-the debility and paralysis of the lower extremities are,
-when the spinal marrow is diseased. Besides, what
-difference does it make, how the sight is lost in onanists?
-the most essential thing to be known is, that
-they can lose it. This unfortunate circumstance is to
-be dreaded by those whose sight is much affected during
-the act of venery, and who remain, as it were, in
-a mist for a few moments after this act. Thus, amaurosis
-was predicted in a public girl, whose case is
-mentioned by Hoffmann, and whose sight was obscured
-whenever she had connexion with men. She finally
-became blind. (<i>De morbis ex nim. ven.</i>, &sect; 26.) The
-sight is rarely lost suddenly: it commonly fades away
-gradually; and the onanist, if he can understand this
-warning, may, by abandoning his bad habits in time,
-preserve the vigor he still possesses; and, sometimes,
-even may recover what he has lost.</p>
-
-<p>The weakness and loss of sight, and the other affections
-of the eye already mentioned, are not the only
-ones which may arise from excessive onanism or
-coition: the muscles of the eye may also be affected.
-Lorry was, we believe, the first to notice this fact.
-“The eyes,” says he, “are affected with convulsive
-and spasmodic motions, after venereal excesses, rather
-than with blindness.” He states, that strabismus may
-be caused by onanism. We have before stated the
-case of a young man, whose eyes were affected with
-violent spasms at the moment of a discharge of semen.
-Demours has observed similar facts. “Masturbation,”
-says he, “affects the optic nerves, and also acts on the
-motor nerves of the eye.” He admits that he can see
-no reason for this. The same author mentions venereal
-excesses among the different causes of partial paralysis
-of the muscles of the eye.</p>
-
-<p>We have already mentioned the wandering pains,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_107">107</span>
-which frequently affect onanists; we have also alluded
-to those which depend on an affection of the spinal
-marrow. We have reason to think, from our own observations,
-and the statements particularly of English
-authors, that the number of pains dependent on an
-affection of the spinal marrow is much larger than is
-generally thought: we think, that most of the pains
-termed rheumatic, particularly those affecting the
-trunk and the limbs, are neuralgic; and that most of
-these neuralgias proceed from an irritation of the medulla
-or its membranes. We do not say that the spinal
-cord is always affected then, as in those cases of myelitis
-which attend paralysis and death: we think that
-it is affected in some manner; and that these pains,
-which are commonly so severe, and frequently so general&mdash;sometimes
-attended with tumefaction, but more
-frequently without it&mdash;which are felt in the course of
-these nerves, are the usual consequences of this affection.
-Hence, it is not surprising, that the act of venery,
-which excites the nervous system so much&mdash;which has
-so marked an action on the spinal marrow, has frequently
-predisposed to neuralgic or rheumatic pains,
-and has directly caused or increased this kind of pains.
-It is well ascertained, and many authors&mdash;particularly
-Hoffmann&mdash;have remarked, that those who indulge in
-onanism, during youth, are more subject to these pains
-than others. The act of venery, even when indulged
-in to a moderate extent, generally increases their violence.
-I have often seen attacks of neuralgia supervene
-immediately after coition. It was an affection
-of this kind which was felt by the onanist who wrote
-to Tissot, that he felt in his face a pain similar to that
-caused by applying a great number of pins.</p>
-
-<p>Individuals who have braved the usual causes of
-rheumatism with impunity, not unfrequently become
-vulnerable to these causes after venereal excesses.
-M. Villeneuve relates the case of a stonecutter, who
-had long been exposed to changes of weather without
-inconvenience, and who was violently attacked with
-rheumatism after unusual venereal excesses. He also
-mentions the case of a groom, who had long slept in a
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_108">108</span>
-damp and narrow stable without suffering, but who
-was attacked with rheumatism the winter after his
-marriage. Saucerotte has seen a similar case: it was
-that of a man who had constantly braved the changes
-of weather, and who was affected with rheumatism
-after indulging in women and wine. The same author
-has established, in the memoir where this fact was
-reported, that muscular rheumatism is only a variety
-of neuralgia. Among the proofs which he gives of it,
-he states that many authors, as Barthez, Scudamore,
-Chaussier, Olivier, and Ferrus, have placed venereal
-excesses among the causes of neuralgias and those of
-rheumatism.</p>
-
-<p>Most authors have considered these excesses as one
-of the predisposing causes of gout. Hippocrates,
-probably, entertained the same idea, if we may judge
-from these two aphorisms:&mdash;“<i>Eunuchi neque podagra
-laborant, neque caluescunt. Puer podagra non tentatur
-ante venereorum usum.</i>” Sydenham also regarded
-excessive indulgence in venereal pleasures as
-tending to produce gout. Guilbert remarks, that even
-hereditary gout is neither a disease of infancy nor of
-youth: he admits, however, that venereal excesses
-may produce it before the time it generally appears.
-Roche exclaims against this opinion: he thinks that
-venereal excesses can only cause attacks of gout. He
-says&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“What influence have masturbation and venereal
-excesses in producing gout? According to men of
-the world, and even to some physicians, they are the
-most fruitful source of this infirmity: and yet on what
-facts does this opinion rest? On this, that several
-gouty people have been great libertines in their youth.
-But how many chaste persons, and how many prelates,
-too, are attacked by this cruel disease? On the other
-hand, are there not as many, and even more libertines
-among the poor, than among the rich? and yet, in general,
-they are not attacked by the gout. Finally, the
-shameful vice of onanism is observed most frequently
-among the young; and we have already said that gout
-is a disease of manhood and old age. Hence, it is
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">109</span>
-wrong to attribute to this order of causes a part of the
-influence which it has not, and cannot have, in producing
-gout. Here, doubtless, has been committed
-the error which has been several times pointed out:
-attacks of gout have frequently been known to supervene
-after venereal excesses or masturbation; and it
-has been concluded that these causes concur powerfully
-in producing the disease itself. Good living and
-gormandizing are, we repeat, the real&mdash;the only sources
-of gout: sobriety, frugality, are the best preservatives
-from it.”</p>
-
-<p>This last phrase shows clearly the origin of Roche’s
-opinion. It is evident that he denies the influence
-attributed to venereal excesses, in the production of
-gout, only to sustain a favorite theory. Roche certainly
-never would have said, that there is more libertinism
-in the lower than in the higher walks of life,
-if he had not been preoccupied with the desire of
-proving that good living is the cause of gout, to the
-exclusion of every other cause. It may be asserted,
-that one mode of living predisposes to the gout more
-than another; and we will agree with every author,
-that this disease appears particularly in individuals
-who are well fed; but we cannot admit, that the possible
-action of certain influences, as that of venereal
-excesses, should be denied. Impressed, however, with
-the vast extent of the influence of venereal excesses,
-and with the uncertainty of its limits, we prefer to
-allow, with all authors, that venereal excesses, like
-many other known and unknown causes, may predispose
-to gout. This opinion seems to be more logical
-than that sustained by Roche with his usual ability.</p>
-
-<p>Roche, also, in accordance with other authors, regards
-venereal excesses as injurious to those affected
-with gout. “The indulgence in venereal pleasures,”
-says Barthez, “should seldom be permitted to those
-affected with gout; for they should abstain from whatever
-weakens or exhausts. Coste, who has written on
-gout, is much more formal. “A gouty person,” says
-he, “should choose between living apart from his wife,
-and being cured of his disease; or caressing her, and
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_110">110</span>
-rendering his disease incurable. Whenever a gouty
-person sees a female,” he adds, “if young, a new root
-to his disease sprouts forth; and if he be old, he drives
-a nail into his coffin.” This opinion differs from that
-of Pietsch, who maintains that gout arises from the
-absorption of vitiated semen, which is retained by continence
-in the seminal vesicles.</p>
-
-<p>Can venereal excesses cause hemorrhoidal affections?
-For want of facts on this subject, we would
-remark, that these excesses <i>may</i> contribute to develop
-these affections, and particularly the exacerbations to
-which they are subject. This was Montegre’s opinion:
-he admitted, that the nervous debility which resulted
-from the abuse of the genital organs, generally
-favored the occurrence of fluxes, motions which occur
-most frequently in people subject to hemorrhoids; and
-also, that in those females who have hemorrhoidal
-tumors on the rectum or vagina, the abuse of coition
-may excite inflammation of these tumors. Montegre,
-however, thinks that excessive continence has a more
-detrimental effect on those affected with hemorrhoids
-than the contrary. He thought that the irritation which
-extreme continence causes in the seminal vesicles and
-adjacent parts, may excite a hemorrhoidal paroxysm:
-hence, he regards the act of venery as generally useful
-to persons affected with hemorrhoids, provided it
-is confined within certain limits. On this opinion, we
-would say, that if the irritation of the seminal passages
-may extend to the adjacent passages, venereal
-excesses which produce this irritation may also cause
-inflammation of the hemorrhoidal tumors much more
-frequently than continence. This is the opinion of
-Begin, also, who mentions, among the direct causes
-of hemorrhoids, “excesses in venereal pleasures&mdash;excesses
-which are always attended with a state of orgasm
-and vascular fulness in the genital system, and in
-all the parts connected with it; and particularly in the
-lower region of the rectum, which receives the same
-vessels in the neck of the bladder, the prostate gland,
-and the seminal vesicles, in the male, and in the uterus
-and vagina in the female.”
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_111">111</span></p>
-
-<p>We may believe, from the enervating action of masturbation,
-that the development of scrofula may be
-excited or favored in those young patients who are
-addicted to it. Few proofs of this, however, are found
-in authors; and it is rare to find records of scrofulous
-symptoms in the histories of those onanists which
-have been published. It, however, would be absurd
-to conclude, from this silence, that the coincidence of
-these symptoms and the ordinary effects of onanism
-never occur, or that this habit cannot call into action
-a disposition to disease. But we must admit, that if
-masturbation be an active cause of this disease, this
-fact would have been noted more frequently.</p>
-
-<p>Further: Certain circumstances seem to indicate,
-that onanism must be but little favorable to the development
-of scrofula. First, onanism renders the limbs
-thinner, dries them, then deprives them of those white
-fluids with which the flesh of scrofulous persons is
-generally infiltrated. Next, since in these latter the
-sensibility is as it were blunted, and the susceptibility
-is slight, onanism tends to excite them. Besides, one
-of the most common effects of the action of the genital
-organs, at puberty, is the disappearance of scrofulous
-engorgements and other symptoms, if they exist.
-Sometimes, the normal development of the genital
-apparatus excites in those who have arrived at puberty
-the swelling of the lymphatic ganglions of the neck,
-axill&aelig;, and particularly of the groins: but in this case,
-these ganglions are painful, and present a kind of inflammatory
-state, analogous to that which is attempted
-to be produced when they are affected with scrofulous
-engorgements. Cabanis has well described what then
-takes place:&mdash;“From the time,” says he, “that the
-evolution of the genital organs commences, there is a
-general motion in the whole lymphatic apparatus; the
-glands of the groins, the mamm&aelig;, those of the axill&aelig;,
-and neck, swell: they often become painful. It is not
-only in girls that the mamm&aelig; swell; in young men,
-I have frequently seen them form tumors, which
-seemed inflammatory: they have often been considered
-as such by ignorant quacks. This symptom generally
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_112">112</span>
-causes uneasiness in those who experience it:
-but this depends not so much on the pain, (which
-sometimes impedes the free motions of the body,) as
-on the influence of this new action&mdash;the commotion
-caused in the imagination by the new system.” This
-state of the lymphatic system would be, as is seen,
-rather antithetic, than analogous to what is seen in
-scrofulous patients. Farther: we have only to compare
-the eunuch with him who has vigorously passed
-through puberty, to see that the action of the genital
-organs is not adapted to favor the development of this
-affection.</p>
-
-<p>The act of venery often causes, also, ganglionary
-swellings; but they do not resemble scrofulous engorgements,
-more than those which arise from the influence
-of puberty. “The first essay of venereal pleasures,”
-says Cabanis, “is often necessary to complete
-the development of the genital organs: thus, the general
-swelling of all the parts where the glands are situated,
-especially of the bosom, of the anterior face of
-the neck, is often the consequence of this great commotion.
-The characters which manifest this swelling
-are much more remarkable in females; hence, perhaps,
-the old physicians, and even some moderns, have
-stated the sudden swelling of the neck in young girls
-as a sign of defloration. But it is wrong to consider
-this as a general and certain sign: it is certainly not
-one.” If the act of venery can produce such an excitement
-in the lymphatic system, it ought to be still
-more manifest when a part of this system is already
-inflamed. This is confirmed by a fact stated by Lordat,
-in the bulletin of the scientific society of Montpelier.
-It relates to a young woman, in whom the jugular
-glands being swelled, a few days after her marriage,
-increased or diminished in size, according as she
-yielded to her husband’s embraces or not. Thus, then,
-if we consider the genital organs, either during the
-acute period of their development, or when the act of
-venery is indulged in, we see that they extend their
-action to the lymphatic apparatus, as they do to the
-other systems; but in a manner which seems the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_113">113</span>
-reverse of that reputed to favor the production of
-scrofula.</p>
-
-<p>Symptoms, however, analogous to those caused by
-scrofula, have been known to occur where there is
-evidence of venereal abuses. Two cases, which we
-have already quoted from M. Dalandeterie, are instances
-of this. The first relates to a young man,
-twenty-four years old, whose health, before he was
-addicted to masturbation, had been good; and whose
-parents, so far as could be ascertained, had never been
-diseased with scrofula, and had never presented any
-disposition to the disease. First, he was affected with
-numbness in the little finger of the right hand, and the
-ring-finger of the left hand; the articulations swelled,
-and formed in these parts tumors, which were regarded
-as scrofulous, and which were soon followed by ulceration
-and caries. The patient experienced no pain;
-and only felt an intolerable itching. The lymphatic
-ganglions of the groin and axill&aelig; were permanently
-swelled; and the bodies of several vertebr&aelig; became,
-as we have seen, affected with caries.</p>
-
-<p>The other patient, who was forty-five years old,
-presented an advanced case of myelitis, and caries of
-the vertebr&aelig;, when there formed, at the lower part of
-the sternum, a hard and indolent tumor, which soon
-became apparently a scrofulous ulcer. The pus from
-this ulcer was ichorous, and the edges were of a violet
-red, swelled and hard; and the soft parts adhered to
-the subjacent bones. The lymphatic ganglions of the
-neck swelled for some time, but they then returned to
-their natural state. M. Dalandeterie adds, that these
-two cases have been selected from many other similar
-or analogous facts: hence, he considers caries of the
-vertebr&aelig; as having then been the consequence of a
-scrofulous principle, which was developed by onanism.</p>
-
-<p>If, however, we carefully analyze these facts, we
-shall find that they do not indicate a scrofulous disease,
-the development of which was but slightly favored
-by the age of the patients, as a <i>tubercular</i> affection&mdash;that
-is, a disease which might be developed at
-every period of life. We think that tubercles were
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_114">114</span>
-developed, in the phalanges, in the first case; and in
-the sternum, in the second; that these tubercles softened,
-and suppurated; and thus were formed the apparent
-scrofulous ulcers presented by these individuals.
-Probably, a similar circumstance occurs in the vertebr&aelig;,
-the bodies of which are destroyed; for distinguished
-observers, especially Delpech, have regarded
-Pott’s disease as a tubercular affection of the body of
-these bones. The cases of Dalandeterie would prove
-only that onanism favors the development of tubercles.
-Unfortunately, they are not the only cases, as we shall
-see, which establish this fact.</p>
-
-<p>Consumption, or phthisis tubercularis, is, in fact,
-one of the diseases caused most frequently by onanism.
-The act of venery&mdash;that power which has so
-much influence on the internal life of the tissues, and
-on the respiratory organs, and which, to use Rullier’s
-expression, seems to agitate the lungs&mdash;is commenced
-in most onanists exactly at that age when the chest
-enlarges in every direction, and which phthisis seems
-to prefer. “How many young persons,” says Portal,
-in his work on phthisis pulmonalis, “have been victims
-to their unhappy passion? Physicians find those every
-day, who remain imbecile, or who are so enervated,
-physically and morally, that they barely drag along a
-miserable existence: others die with marasmus; and
-many with phthisis pulmonalis.” In another work,
-the same author relates the case of a young person,
-seventeen years old, who was addicted to masturbation,
-and who fell a victim to this disease. This young
-person, who had became much deformed, was affected
-with raising of blood, and soon died of phthisis. “It results
-from numerous well ascertained facts,” say Fournier
-and Begin, “that those persons who indulge in
-onanism are generally remarkable for the imperfect
-development of their thorax, and for the promptitude
-with which the least exercise renders respiration difficult
-and hurried. Almost all these individuals contract
-chronic catarrhs, or more serious affections of the
-pulmonary organs; and finally perish, in a complete
-state of phthisis.” Broussais, also, places among the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_115">115</span>
-causes of phthisis pulmonalis, “erotic spasms, no matter
-in what manner they are excited.”</p>
-
-<p>We have seen this affection, more frequently than
-any other, resulting from onanism. Among other instances,
-we would mention that of a young man, who
-died in 1833. This young man sustained himself so
-well in public debate, that he was placed, at the expense
-of government, in a public school. He was
-then sixteen years old; and his health, which had previously
-been good, now failed. He became pale, languished,
-and grew thin; and this, too, although his
-appetite was keen, and his digestion excellent. Having
-my suspicions, and having communicated them to the
-patient, and also to other persons who could enlighten
-me, we were led to believe, from the answers made
-to me, that the too rapid growth of the body was the
-only cause of the state presented by the patient; and
-his state varied so little from that of health, that the
-young man assured me that he was very well. I therefore
-simply directed him to take more exercise, and to
-be more free in his diet. His loss of flesh, however,
-and paleness continuing, his parents felt anxious about
-him. I examined his organs separately: I could find
-none presenting any marks of disease, or which could
-explain the general state of the patient. My first suspicions
-then returned; but on questioning him, the
-same answers were given. The patient, who had
-already seen an instance of the bad effects of onanism,
-in the person of his younger brother, seemed deeply
-impressed with the danger of his habit. He, however,
-continued to lose strength. One day, after taking
-more violent exercise than usual, he fainted away.
-At the same time, a dry cough supervened, to which
-the patient at first did not attend. This was the first
-symptom indicating an affection of any particular organ.
-This cough soon became more frequent; and,
-by means of auscultation, we found that the respiration,
-at the summit of one of the lungs, was imperfect.
-At this time, the patient avowed to his father his deplorable
-habit. This had been contracted at school;
-it had been indulged in for two years; and of late,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_116">116</span>
-much more frequently than before. His danger was
-fully pointed out to him; parents, friends, physicians,
-all conjured him to abandon this secret vice. Treatises
-on onanism were placed in his hands; and every
-attempt was made to arouse in him the feeling of self-preservation.
-He was terrified; but the power of the
-habit was so great, that he did not leave it off till consumption
-had progressed very far. Deep abscesses
-successively formed in his lungs; the expectoration
-soon became purulent and excessive. Night sweats
-and diarrhœa followed; and the patient died in a terrible
-state of marasmus and exhaustion.</p>
-
-<p>In 1829, we prescribed for a young man, whose career
-was much more rapid. He had always enjoyed
-excellent health; and his parents exhibited no marks
-of consumption. Having married a very pretty widow,
-he indulged himself with her very freely at night,
-while during the day both were assiduously engaged.
-The female was seven or eight years older than her
-husband, and did not suffer much. He, however, soon
-became affected with cough, attended with bloody expectoration.
-When consulted, we informed the patient
-of his danger, unless he changed his mode of living.
-Our advice was not followed; and shortly after, hemorrhage
-from the lungs supervened so abundantly and
-obstinately, that notwithstanding the most active treatment,
-he died in eight days.</p>
-
-<p>The young man, too, mentioned by Tissot, was also
-doubtless affected with phthisis. “He came to Montpelier
-to pursue his studies; but was affected with
-phthisis, from excessive onanism: and I remember
-that his cough was so hard and constant, that all those
-who were near him were incommoded by it. He was
-frequently bled; doubtless, with a view to his relief.
-On consultation, he was ordered to go home, and take
-turtle soup; and two hours after, he died.”</p>
-
-<p>It is with phthisis, as with most of the other diseases,
-caused by masturbation. This habit causes
-disease, by cherishing and by cultivating special dispositions.
-Thus, the onanist born of consumptive
-parents, whose chest is narrow, with a long neck and
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_117">117</span>
-thin limbs, and who presents symptoms of scrofula,
-is more liable to be affected with phthisis or consumption.
-This was the case with a young man, as mentioned
-by Rozier. This patient was evidently scrofulous,
-and many members of his family had been affected
-with the disease. He remained, however, pretty
-well until he was eighteen years old, when, in consequence
-of a contusion in one of his legs, he became
-affected with an ulcer, which was a long time healing.
-After it was cured, however, he remained in good
-health, and was lively, animated, and intelligent; but
-when twenty-five years old, he commenced indulging
-in onanism. He soon felt oppression at the chest, and
-cough; and although the affection of his chest increased,
-and he was aware of the dangers of onanism,
-he continued to indulge. Many physicians were consulted;
-but he did not mention his bad habit. The
-affection of the lungs continued; his sleep was interrupted;
-hectic fever supervened; his cheeks were
-tinged with an unnatural color; and his expectoration
-was grayish and purulent. The patient then decided
-on avowing his habit. Rozier attempted, in the most
-touching and persuasive manner, to induce him to
-abandon it; but in vain. Consumption continued to
-progress; and he was soon unable to talk, to move, or
-to make the least motion, without danger of suffocation.
-After remaining in this horrid state three years, the
-patient died.</p>
-
-<p>We have already remarked several times, that the
-respiration in onanists is frequently affected. Their
-breath is often short; they pant on the slightest exercise;
-are subject to stifling, &amp;c. These symptoms,
-the existence of which cannot always be explained by
-that of any organic alteration in the heart or lungs,
-finally assume, in some individuals, the characters
-attributed to <i>nervous asthma</i>. The authors who have
-written on this subject, have all classed venereal excesses
-among its most frequent causes. “Individuals
-of a nervous temperament,” says M. Ferrus, “seem
-most particularly liable to it. But the influence of
-certain bad habits&mdash;as masturbation, the abuse of venereal
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_118">118</span>
-pleasures by young persons, excesses of the table
-in old men, &amp;c.&mdash;contribute, as powerfully as individual
-predispositions, to produce this disease.” Jolly
-remarks, in nearly similar language:&mdash;“Venereal excesses
-and masturbation,” says this distinguished physician,
-“have appeared in some cases to produce
-asthma. And if some authors think that too much
-importance is attached to this cause, they may readily
-appreciate its value by observing the effects of the venereal
-orgasm on the pulmonary circulation.” Daily
-observation proves that persons affected with asthma
-have generally used the goods of this life freely. To
-admit that venereal excesses often prepare for or excite
-an attack of asthma, we have only to regard an attack
-of asthma, whether excited or not by an organic lesion,
-as consisting in a spasm of the glottis; or, as Reisessen
-and Cruvelhier think, of the ramifications of the
-bronchi.</p>
-
-<p>Our remarks on asthma may apply to diseases of
-the heart and large vessels. The frequent repetitions
-of an act which render the emotions so powerful, frequent,
-and tumultuous, has often produced or increased
-aneurismatic dilatations of this organ; the thickening
-of its parietes, or other diseases, of the parenchyma,
-or of the vessels which leave it and go to it. Thus,
-the abuse of onanism, and of the pleasures of love,
-holds a high place on the list of causes of this affection.
-We have seen dilatations of the left ventricle
-of the heart, which evidently arose from this cause.
-“In some cases,” says Fournier and Begin, “palpitations,
-and even considerable lesions of the heart and
-large vessels, could have no other cause, in patients
-whose vigorous constitutions have long resisted the
-destructive practice of onanism, and who, notwithstanding
-their excesses, have attained an advanced
-age.” This last remark is particularly just. These
-diseases are by no means so immediately dangerous
-as is generally believed. The principal symptoms of
-diseases of the heart may exist, although this organ
-may not be materially altered. A remarkable instance
-of this may be seen in one of the cases already mentioned.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_119">119</span>
-The patient experienced for a long time difficulty
-of breathing; which increased on walking, and
-especially on going up stairs. These symptoms were
-so marked, that on entering the hospital, he exhibited
-all the symptoms of a hypertrophy of the left cavities
-of the heart. Four months after his entrance into the
-hospital, the patient died of the consequences of myelitis;
-and on opening the body, the heart was found
-perfectly healthy, of its normal size, and presented
-nothing unusual in the extent of its cavities, or in the
-thickness of their parietes.</p>
-
-<p>Among the diseases of the heart which may be
-caused by venereal excesses, there is one in particular
-mentioned by Blaud. He thinks that too frequent
-coition predisposes to <i>polypi of the heart</i>. He maintains,
-that the act produces its effects, either by weakening
-the motive powers of this organ, which they
-over-excite momentarily; or by causing too great an
-accumulation, and consequently a congestion of blood,
-in the cardiac cavities. This last fact seemed to him
-to be proved, by the oppression, the congestion in the
-head, and the palpitations, which attend coition.</p>
-
-<p>If venereal excesses may cause diseases of the heart,
-they may increase those which exist. They may also,
-by causing the rupture of an aneurism, produce instant
-death. But having already treated of these effects,
-we shall not return to the subject.</p>
-
-<p>Rachitis, and particularly alterations in the height,
-have been named by many authors among the ordinary
-effects of premature indulgences. We have already
-given, from Portal, the remarkable case of a young
-girl, who, indulging in excesses of onanism, became
-humpbacked, and then consumptive. In six months,
-the curve of the vertebral column progressed rapidly;
-the chest was depressed at the lower part of the sternum;
-there was a deep hollow in the epigastric region,
-while the abdomen was prominent. The same author
-has observed other similar cases. “I have seen,” says
-he, “four or five of these unfortunate creatures, from
-fifteen to eighteen years old, in whom the back was very
-convex, and the abdomen seemed pressed into the chest;
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_120">120</span>
-the extremities of the long bones, particularly those
-which form the elbows and knees, were very much
-enlarged; the legs were thrown out, and their muscles
-were scarcely developed; their eyes were sunken; their
-countenances pale and white; and their voices acute.
-Any one, to judge of their ages by their looks, would
-think that they were not more than twelve years old.
-They were extremely weak, physically and morally,
-and became imbecile long before they died.” Dr. Richard,
-cited by Petit, has also seen considerable deformity
-of the ribs, resulting from onanism. Tissot placed
-this habit first among the causes of rachitis. M. Lonyer
-Villermey, also, regards onanism and involuntary
-pollutions as an active source of deviations in height.
-On the other hand, Dr. Laguerre, a gentleman who
-has attended to rachitic persons a good deal, tells us
-that the habit has been observed by him only once, as
-a cause of spinal deformity.</p>
-
-<p>It has also been advanced, that premature enjoyment
-may arrest the growth of the body, and consequently
-prevent it from attaining its normal height. We do
-not deny the possibility of such a result. We have
-seen many onanists, however, grow very rapidly, notwithstanding
-their excesses, and all the symptoms of
-extensive alteration. It follows, also, from the researches
-of Villerm&eacute; and Quetelet, that the mean
-height of man is generally greater in the city than in
-the country; and yet, in the former, masturbation is
-more frequent. We can see, too, by comparing the
-increase in weight to that in length, during the first
-twenty years, that the development of the genital
-organs exercises much more influence on the mass of
-the body, than on its height: thus, between the ages
-of four and fifteen years&mdash;that is, during the period of
-puberty&mdash;the annual increase of weight is quadruple
-of what it was in preceding years. Do not these reasons
-authorize us to think, that if premature excesses
-have any influence on the height of man, this action
-is less than is generally imagined?</p>
-
-<p>Besides rachitis, caries, and tubercles, which have
-been mentioned, are the bones ever affected with any
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_121">121</span>
-other disease, in consequence of venereal indulgences?
-The only case in point is that already mentioned,(p. 85)
-as reported by Serrurier, of a man who was reduced
-to a complete state of marasmus, in consequence of
-venereal excesses and nocturnal pollutions. In this
-man’s case, a remarkable circumstance occurred. Having
-attempted, a few days before death, to rest himself
-from the fatigues of the bed, by spending a few hours
-in the easy chair, he fractured the bone of his right
-thigh at its centre, merely by attempting to cross the
-right thigh on the left. Might not this disease, which
-is very rare, and is termed friability of the bones, be
-also caused by the excesses we have mentioned?</p>
-
-<p>These excesses, if accompanied by those of the
-table, or if indulged in under unfavorable circumstances,
-may be followed by acute, as well as by
-chronic affections, and particularly by fevers of a bad
-character. This result of excessive enjoyments is
-frequent; and cases of it have been seen by almost
-every physician. It was known to the ancients. Hippocrates
-gives the history of a young man of Melibœa,
-who, after indulging in women and wine, was attacked
-with all the symptoms of typhus fever. Bartholin
-knew a person, recently married, who was attacked,
-after conjugal excesses, with an acute fever, attended
-with great depression, sinking, nausea, immoderate
-thirst, &amp;c. This patient was cured by rest and tonics.
-Hoffmann, who states this case, also mentions that of
-a man, who never indulged in venereal excesses without
-being attacked with fever, which continued several
-days. Tissot, in 1761 and 1762, knew two very
-healthy, strong, and vigorous young men, who were
-attacked, one the day after, and the other the second
-night of their marriage, with a very violent fever, preceded
-by no chill, pulse quick and hard, wakefulness,
-many slight convulsive motions, very great inquietude,
-and dry skin. The appearance of the second was
-very much altered, and he was troubled with dysuria.
-He first thought that an intemperate use of wine was in
-part the procuring part of these symptoms; but I was
-of a different opinion in regard to the second. They
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_122">122</span>
-were cured at the end of two days. This circumstance
-added to the character of the disease, leaves no doubt
-of the cause.</p>
-
-<p>Sauvages admits, after Dellon, that a typhus of exhausted
-persons exists. The Portuguese term patients
-affected with this malady, <i>esfalfados</i>. The exhaustion
-caused by immoderate indulgence in venereal pleasures,
-says this author, is very common among the Indians.
-It is a continued fever, in which the pulse is
-sometimes full and strong, sometimes weak, and almost
-imperceptible. The urine is sometimes very red, but
-transparent; the skin is hot and dry; and there is
-watchfulness, nausea, and violent thirst.</p>
-
-<p>Farther: All authors who have written on the diseases
-of warm climates, have mentioned the too frequent
-repetition of the act of venery among the causes
-of these typhus affections, which have been termed
-<i>febris ardens</i>, <i>causus</i>, <i>yellow fever</i>, &amp;c. In temperate
-climates, adynamic ataxic fevers, &amp;c., and very
-severe acute diseases, have often been known to occur
-from excesses in venery, or from masturbation.</p>
-
-<p>If <i>satyriasis</i> and <i>nymphomania</i> have been regarded
-as rare diseases, it is only because the meaning of
-these terms has been too confined to embrace numerous
-cases which, however, have the greatest analogy
-with those diseases to which these terms are applied.
-Generally, these persons are considered as affected
-with satyriasis and nymphomania, who are irresistibly
-impelled to coition, and resort, to satisfy their desires,
-to the most indecent actions, and to the most direct
-provocations. Thus defined, these diseases are rare;
-and most practitioners have never seen them. But if
-satyriasis and nymphomania be regarded as an unusual
-state of heat, by which one is led to desire and to
-practise not only coition, but the act of venery in any
-mode, then the scene enlarges, and these affections
-deserve to be placed among those which are observed
-most frequently.</p>
-
-<p>We shall adopt the latter sense. In our view, male
-and female onanists are affected with satyriasis and
-nymphomania, as much as those to whom these terms
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_123">123</span>
-are generally applied. In both, the sense of venery,
-existing to an unusual extent, affects the mind, and
-incites to dangerous actions, repugnant both to modesty
-and reason. Onanists do not, like other persons affected
-with satyriasis, expose their persons, and solicit
-with voice and gesture those of the other sex: their
-deranged and delirious imaginations pursue another
-course. What need have they of the other sex?
-Their inclinations lead them to solitary indulgence.
-Their thoughts and actions, however, are not less vile
-than those of others affected with satyriasis; but they
-are indulged in secret. Hence, between the satyriasis
-of books and that of onanists, there is only a difference
-of form: the foundation is the same. Admit, however,
-that it be desirable to distinguish this satyriasis
-from the former, and to give it a special name; is it
-not better to consider them only as two varieties of
-the same affection, one of which impels to onanism,
-the other to coition?</p>
-
-<p>The degree of onanistic satyriasis and of nymphomania
-depends on the power the venereal sense has
-over the will. These affections do not exist in those
-with whom it is optional whether they shall indulge
-in onanism or not, nor in those who can refrain from
-coition. Thus, then, a person may masturbate, without
-being affected with satyriasis. This is the case,
-when the sentiment of self-preservation is sufficiently
-strong to resist desires, when the persons yield readily
-to reprimands and punishments. Satyriasis may be
-considered as existing to some extent in the onanist,
-if he cannot refrain. This was the case with a young
-man, whose history is given by Begin and Fournier.
-From early puberty, he was addicted to masturbation;
-and when eighteen years old, he presented some of
-the bad effects of this habit. This young man was
-endowed with a brilliant mind: but, although well
-educated, and although he well knew the dangers of
-his habit, yet he could not refrain. His good resolutions
-were formed only to be broken. He died.</p>
-
-<p>In a young woman whom we attended, the struggle
-with her passions terminated more favorably. It was
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_124">124</span>
-not the desire of preserving her life, which induced
-her to leave off her bad habits; but the wish of conforming
-to the will of her father. Her constitution
-was already considerably affected, when the cause of
-it was discovered. The father of this young girl told
-her how much pain and shame her bad habit caused
-him, and requested her to abstain from it. She was
-extremely mild and docile, and made every effort to
-please and obey him. It was in vain: but whenever
-she was inclined to masturbate, the fault was confessed
-as soon as committed. Coercive measures were finally
-resolved upon. The patient not only consented to
-have her hands tied every night, but requested it, and
-even stated the manner in which she might be most
-effectually prevented from abusing herself. The venereal
-sense gradually became subdued, and confined
-within the proper limits. And thus, this habit&mdash;or,
-rather, the nymphomania, which was the result, and
-also the cause of it&mdash;was cured.</p>
-
-<p>Satyriasis and nymphomania, arising from onanism,
-are most intense, when the persons affected with it
-can no longer conceal their feelings, but indulge openly
-in vile manœuvres. We have already mentioned some
-remarkable instances of this state. The following
-may serve as the type of the greatest degree of nymphomania.
-The patient was a little girl less than three
-years old, who indulged freely in onanism. Neither
-caresses, entreaties, threats, nor punishments, could
-correct her. The child grew, however. But at the
-sight of any pleasant object, she abandoned herself to
-her manœuvres. At the period of the crisis, she
-seemed almost entirely to have lost her sight and
-hearing. Threats and punishments finally restrained
-her, while in the presence of her parents; but when
-alone, she still continued her bad habits. This state
-resisted all remedies. When married, the legitimate
-sources of enjoyment took the place of the passionate
-indulgences to which she had been accustomed from
-infancy. She finally became pregnant, and died in
-labor. (<i>Dict. des Sc. Med.</i>; vol. xxxvi., p. 566.)</p>
-
-<p>Onanism is not only a direct cause of satyriasis and
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_125">125</span>
-of nymphomania; it may leave in the genital organs
-a certain disposition, which, if cherished, may degenerate
-into one of these affections. The following case,
-published by Duprest-Rony, seems to us to be an instance
-of this:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>A young man, twenty years old, of a strong and almost
-athletic frame, but who had been enfeebled by
-onanism, abandoned himself, from the age of fifteen
-to eighteen years, to this destructive habit. He indulged
-in this habit even while in the bath, and sometimes
-to the extent of fifteen times in a day. His
-constitution was enfeebled; his mind was affected;
-his memory impaired. In accordance with the advice
-of some prudent people, this young man renounced
-this fatal habit. During the next two years, he was
-perfectly continent. His constitution resumed its vigor;
-his memory and other mental faculties were restored.
-His parents now placed him with a merchant. He
-entered upon his new occupations with zeal and activity;
-but receiving marks of attachment from the merchant
-and his wife daily, he imagined that she was in
-love with him. On his side, the passion was returned.
-Actuated by the fear of violating the duties of gratitude,
-and the desire of possessing this lady, who was
-neither young nor pretty, his situation daily became
-more embarrassing. Whenever she looked at him,
-erections took place, and there was a discharge of
-semen. During the night, he had frequent pollutions.
-His faculties now became deranged: this derangement
-supervened after reading the Phedra of Racine. He
-identified himself so closely with the characters of
-this piece, that he supposed himself to be Hippolyte,
-and considered his mistress to be Phedra, and her husband
-as Theseus. More amorous than Hippolyte, and
-no less virtuous, he threw himself one day at the feet
-of Theseus, and said, “Theseus! the crime is not yet
-consummated&mdash;your wife is not yet guilty. I have
-hitherto resisted her prayers&mdash;her tears: but I am no
-longer master of myself; and if she is not removed
-from my presence, I must yield.” Great was the astonishment
-of the supposed Theseus. He resolved to
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_126">126</span>
-send the young man away. This cured the delirium:
-but the erections and seminal emissions continued.
-The stomach and intestinal tube became inert. The
-patient’s appetite was good; but as soon as he ate
-food, pains occurred in the epigastric region, and uneasiness
-in the rest of the body. The disease finally
-yielded to the combined use of antispasmodics and
-tonics. And now, this young man, who has been
-married for five or six years, enjoys fine health. (<i>Diss.
-sur le Satyriasis.</i> Paris, an xii.)</p>
-
-<p>Instead of the disposition just mentioned, masturbation
-may leave in the genital organs an irritability of
-a different kind, the results of which are not less disagreeable.
-A case of this presented itself in a young
-female, whom we attended. While at board, she indulged
-freely in onanism. She was married when
-seventeen years old; and then expected legally to enjoy
-what had seemed to her the extreme of pleasure.
-She was disappointed, however: marriage was only
-the source of uneasiness and pain. She was perfectly
-insensible to the caresses of her husband&mdash;or, rather,
-in submitting to them, she experienced the most disagreeable
-sensations. A painful state of spasms and
-convulsions then affected her, which continued several
-hours after the cause had ceased to act. We were
-called to her several times at night, to relieve this
-state, which caused great anxiety. This lady’s susceptibility,
-also, was very great; and she constantly
-complained of some of the attendants of hysteria. She
-presented every appearance of a lymphatic temperament.
-During her youth, too, she had been affected
-with symptoms of scrofula, from which even now she
-is not entirely free, although twenty-two years old.
-Do not these circumstances, not generally coexistent
-with extreme sensibility, prove, that the extreme irritability
-of the uterine system is to be ascribed to her
-self-abuse?</p>
-
-<p>Priapism, which signifies permanent erection of the
-penis, without pleasure, and even in some cases with
-pain, sometimes follows indiscretions. This has been
-seen particularly in young children, whose genital organs
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_127">127</span>
-have been excited: sometimes, too, it occurs in
-old men. Cœlius Aurelian, (lib. iii., ch. 18,) relates,
-that an old man was affected with priapism for several
-months. The erection was firm, like a horn, but
-not very painful. Finally, it yielded.</p>
-
-<p>The genital organs may, from too much excitement,
-lose their sensibility, and waste. The manipulations,
-which at first were followed with the desired result,
-become unable to excite the genital sense. They may
-sometimes cause the erection of the penis, and even
-excite a painful or inconvenient priapism; but they
-cannot renew the fountain of enjoyment. The remembrance
-of past pleasures remains; and the onanist,
-disturbed by their recollection, torments his blunted
-organs. Obtaining no satisfaction from the modes
-formerly employed, he now resorts to others, which
-are sometimes dreadful. His hand which is now
-armed with some instrument, no longer confines itself
-to the surface: the surface no longer feels. He now
-ventures inside, and shrinks from nothing. This continues
-until these dangerous resources fail, which happens,
-because they also lose their effect, or because of
-the severe accidents with which they are sometimes
-attended.</p>
-
-<p>The following case from Chopart, on diseases of
-the urinary passages, shows the almost incredible extent
-of insensibility which the penis may attain, or of
-delirium which may affect a man, who, having exhausted
-his faculties by excesses, still remains a slave
-to his passions:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“A shepherd of Languedoc, Gabriel Gallien, about
-the age of fifteen, became addicted to onanism, and to
-such a degree, as to practise it seven or eight times in
-a day. Emission became at last so difficult, that he
-would strive for an hour, and then discharge only a
-few drops of blood. At the age of six and twenty, his
-hand became insufficient: all he could do, was to keep
-the penis in a continual state of priapism. He then
-bethought himself of tickling the internal part of his
-urethra, by means of a bit of wood, six inches long;
-and he would spend in that occupation several hours,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_128">128</span>
-while tending his flocks in the solitude of the mountains.
-By a continuation of this titillation for sixteen
-years, the canal of the urethra became hard, callous,
-and insensible. The piece of wood then became as
-ineffectual as his hand. At last, after much fruitless
-effort, G., one day in despair, drew from his pocket a
-blunt knife, and made an incision into his glands, along
-the course of the urethra. This operation, which would
-have been painful to any body else, was, in him, attended
-with a sensation of pleasure, followed by a
-copious emission. He had recourse to his new discovery
-every time his desire returned. When, after
-an incision into the cavernous bodies, the blood flowed
-profusely, he stopped the hemorrhage, by applying
-around the penis a pretty tight ligature. At last, after
-repeating the same process, perhaps a thousand times,
-he ended in splitting his penis into two equal parts,
-from the orifice of the penis to the stratum, very near
-to the symphisis pubis. When he had got so far, unable
-to carry his incision any farther, and again reduced
-to new privations, he had recourse to a piece of wood,
-shorter than the former: he introduced it into what
-remained of the urethra, and exciting at pleasure the
-extremities of the ejaculatory ducts, he provoked easily
-the discharge of semen. He continued this about ten
-years. After that long space of time, he one day introduced
-his bit of wood so carelessly, that it slipped
-from his fingers, and dropped into the bladder. Excruciating
-pain and serious symptoms came on. The
-patient was conveyed to the hospital at Narbonne.
-The surgeon, surprised at the sight of two penes of
-ordinary size, both capable of erection, and in that
-stage diverging on both sides; and seeing, besides,
-from the scars, and from the callous edges of the divisions,
-that this conformation was not congenital
-from his birth; obliged the patient to give him an account
-of his life, which he did, with the details which
-have been related. This wretch was cut, as for the
-stone&mdash;recovered of the operation&mdash;but died three
-months after, of an abscess in the right side of the
-chest; his phthisical state having been evidently
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_129">129</span>
-brought on by the practice of onanism, carried on
-nearly forty years.”</p>
-
-<p>Whatever may be the degree of degradation attending
-onanism, we do not think it possible to adduce a
-second instance of such a mutilation. Gallien’s unhappy
-idea of introducing a foreign body into the
-urethra, has often occurred to others, who had availed
-themselves, but unsuccessfully, of the ordinary resources
-of masturbation. These unfortunate people
-have always been obliged to call in medical advice,
-either on account of the diseases caused by their dangerous
-manœuvres, or&mdash;much more frequently&mdash;by the
-symptoms to which they fall victims, through their
-carelessness. In fact, the implements used often escape
-into the bladder; and then the acute suffering
-and fear of death oblige them to reveal what they had
-formerly concealed, and to undergo an operation which
-is always painful, and which is not exempt from
-danger.</p>
-
-<p>We will give a few instances of this kind of accident.
-An innkeeper, near Saumur, was in the habit,
-like Gallien, of titillating the urethra, by introducing
-foreign bodies. He used an iron wire, seven or eight
-inches long, the end of which was crooked like a hook,
-to obtain, probably, more exquisite pleasure. One day,
-while indulging in this singular manœuvre, he suddenly
-felt severe pain. The membraneous portion of
-the canal was ruptured. The unfortunate man made
-several attempts to withdraw the wire; but the hook,
-which had entered the soft parts, rendered it impossible.
-Overcome by suffering and shame, he wished
-to get rid of it; and with this view, he rounded the
-loose part of the wire into the form of a ring, proposing
-in this manner to pull upon it more firmly. He exercised
-this force till the ring was nearly broken, but the
-iron was still in its place. He now expected death;
-but the suffering was so great, that he was obliged to
-call a physician; and Dr. Fardeau, of Saumur, visited
-him.</p>
-
-<p>The penis, and also the skin of the scrotum, was
-enormously tumefied: all the tissues which are inserted
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_130">130</span>
-in the penis were also swelled, hot, and painful. The
-belly began to be puffy, and the urine was suppressed;
-the face was red, and the eye filmy; the mind began
-to be affected; the pulse was hard, frequent, and
-corded. Dr. Fardeau grasped the loose portion of the
-wire, pulled upon it slightly, and immediately found
-that the other end was arrested by an immoveable obstacle.
-He then examined the parts attentively; and
-found, to his astonishment, that the hook was fixed in
-the inner edge of the ischiatic tuberosity. An oblong
-incision was now made over this part, the hook seized,
-and the wire was withdrawn through the perineum.
-The patient was relieved, and finally was completely
-restored. (<i>Lancette Fr.</i>, October 13th, 1831.)</p>
-
-<p>Saraill&eacute; has reported a similar case. The patient
-was fifty years old, and called this surgeon the 18th
-of October, 1813. He stated that a sailing needle,
-about four inches long, had unfortunately slipped into
-the urethra; and the point had become fixed upward,
-near the root of the penis. After suffering for eight
-days, during which the presence of this body excited
-frequent erections, Lallemand operated, and extracted it.</p>
-
-<p>Many individuals have been similarly affected. They
-have all imagined that they could extract the instrument
-they used, when some unforeseen accident has
-deprived them of it. A young man, nineteen years
-old, whose case is mentioned by Louis Senn, made
-use of the stalk of a plant, which he introduced into
-the urethra. It broke; and after much suffering, the
-operation for stone was employed to extract it, and the
-calculi which had formed around it. A similar circumstance
-happened to a man, thirty-eight years old,
-a patient of Rigal’s. This man introduced into his
-urethra the stalk of a sword lily, (<i>gladiolus communis</i>.)
-This stalk broke, fell into the bladder, and after two
-months of pain and danger, the operation for stone
-was employed to extract it. It was two inches long;
-and was already covered with a saline concretion, one
-or two lines thick. Bonnet, formerly surgeon at Hotel
-Dieu, at Clermont, stated in his lectures, that a
-vine-dresser used a vine-stalk for this purpose. During
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_131">131</span>
-an emission of semen, he dropped the stalk, which
-entered the urethra, and passed into the bladder, where
-it caused symptoms which required the operation of
-lithotomy. The foreign body extracted was three inches
-long, and three lines thick. Would it be believed,
-that Civiale has extracted from the bladder of a man,
-by means of lithotrity, a bean, which was introduced
-eleven months before, and which gave rise to all the
-symptoms of stone? A volume might be filled with
-facts of a similar character. Many may be found in
-the Ephemerides Curiosorum, Memoirs of the Royal
-Academy of Sciences, those of the Royal Society of
-Medicine, and of the Academy of Surgery; in the
-works of Chopart, Deschamps, Lamotte, Tolet, Morgagni,
-Van Swieten, Morand, Pouteau, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p>The dangers of these practices are not simply those
-which are stated in the facts already mentioned; nor
-are they confined to exhausting the rest of the sensibility
-preserved in the genital organs: they finally
-cause chronic diseases of the urethra and bladder.
-These organs, when constantly irritated by applications
-which in individuals not entirely exhausted are
-always painful&mdash;these organs inflame; indurations,
-ulcerations, and strictures, form in the urethra; after
-which supervene all the symptoms of acute and chronic
-blenorrhea, detentions of urine, and catarrh of the
-bladder.</p>
-
-<p>Venereal delirium has led other individuals to use
-processes no less ridiculous, and equally as dangerous.
-The penis of those who are thus unfortunate has remained
-in the places where it has been introduced,
-with a view to imitate the natural process better. Sabatier
-has related the case of a young man, who had
-passed his penis through the handle of a key. The
-handle had been pushed far towards the pubis, and the
-penis had swelled so as to conceal it from sight: the
-swelling was also increased by the efforts of the patient
-to withdraw it. After oiling the parts well, the
-handle was slipped down as far as the glans; but here
-scarifications were required, to diminish the engorgement,
-before the penis could be liberated. After this,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_132">132</span>
-escars sloughed off, which were followed by cicatrices,
-which rendered the part deformed, although a sound
-was introduced into the urethra, to prevent this result.</p>
-
-<p>The same author relates that a young man had
-passed his penis into a copper ring: this, however,
-was fortunately divided with a pair of strong scissors.
-Another used a rough iron ring for this purpose. The
-penis puffed out, above and below this ring. A locksmith
-was called in, to file it off, which could only be
-done by placing small bits of wood between the penis
-and the iron ring. Much time was required to remove
-it. In the same manner&mdash;that is, by filing&mdash;a ring
-was removed from another patient, where gangrene
-had threatened to appear.</p>
-
-<p>One of the most horrid cases of this kind on record,
-is that of a young man, who, on taking a bath, indulged
-in masturbation, by placing his penis into the hole in
-the bottom of the tub, made for the removal of the
-water. The glans soon became so much swelled, that
-he could not withdraw it. His cries brought him assistance;
-but it was not easy to remove him from the
-fetters he had forged for himself. (<i>Dict. des Sc. Med.</i>,
-vol. xxi., p. 167.)</p>
-
-<p>Many similar cases have occurred in Dupuytren’s
-practice. One was that of a young man who came to
-the clinical lecture at Hotel Dieu, having the socket
-of a candlestick, in front of which the glans was
-enormously tumefied. Being unable, by any effort, to
-remove it, the cylindrical portion surrounding the penis
-was filed, and thus taken from him. It would occupy
-too much room, to enumerate all the facts of this
-kind which have been noted by practitioners; but a
-common accident, and which has been seen several
-times by Dupuytren, is the ligature of the penis by a
-thread or wire. Some young men, and even adults,
-have bound the penis in fits of erotic delirium, so that
-the knot could not be loosed; and a circular section
-has been made in the skin, and the urethra even has
-been opened and cut. It is evident, that, in these
-cases, the only thing to be done is to divide the thread,
-to dress the wound, and then to introduce a gum-elastic
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_133">133</span>
-sound, in order to prevent the formation of an urinary
-fistula, or of an accidental hypospadias.</p>
-
-<p>Another kind of strangulation&mdash;which is much less
-serious, however, than those we have mentioned&mdash;may
-result from masturbation and coition, in those individuals
-where the opening of the prepuce is too narrow.
-This prolongation of the skin, after being drawn
-violently back behind the corona glandis, strangles the
-penis, as would be done by a foreign body, and cannot
-be brought again to its primitive situation: there is
-then a paraphimosis. All authors who have treated
-of this affection, have placed among the causes of it
-that which we have mentioned. We have seen several
-instances of this character. I will cite that of a
-young boy, seven or eight years old, in whom this accident
-was produced during masturbation. The glans
-was tumefied, and the prepuce formed a large fold
-around it. The frightened parents sent for our assistance.
-Methodical and long continued pressure soon
-brought things to their proper state.</p>
-
-<p><i>Herpes praeputialis</i>, another affection of the prepuce,
-may arise from the constant excitement of this part.
-Fortunately, this eruption is a slight disease, and generally
-terminates in a week or two, even without medical
-treatment.</p>
-
-<p>Persons who indulge in lascivious ideas, are often
-affected with a discharge from the end of the penis&mdash;and
-this though there has been no masturbation&mdash;of a
-viscid, whitish mucus, which leaves on the linen spots
-similar to those produced by the white of an egg. The
-edges of the meatus urinarius may also be glued together,
-by the drying of this mucus. This discharge,
-which has been described by John Hunter, is not a
-disease, although it has all the appearance of it; and
-it keeps some people in constant fear, lest they have
-contracted gonorrhœa. It, however, results from an
-unusual excitement of the mucous membrane, lining
-the glans and urethra. Now, if the simple excitement
-of the venereal sense can cause such an effect,
-what might not be expected from excesses in coition
-or masturbation? Thus, these causes are mentioned,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_134">134</span>
-whenever the causes of balanitis and blenorrhagia are
-alluded to. All authors agree on this subject; and if
-but few cases are brought forward in support of this
-opinion, it is because the subject has not been disputed.
-The following is found in a dissertation of Closs.
-The patient was a young man addicted to masturbation,
-who had been affected for more than six months
-with a gonorrhœal discharge, which had been neglected
-because it occasioned no suffering. The matter
-of the discharge, however, becoming acrid, green,
-and yellow, he was obliged to ask medical advice.
-He protested, under oath, that he had never been exposed
-to contract disease; and Closs, therefore, considered
-this blenorrhea as the result of masturbation,
-in which the patient had indulged even before puberty.</p>
-
-<p>This symptom is seen still more frequently after
-excesses in coition, especially if attended with excesses
-in drinking, as Lallemand has remarked, or if one has
-cohabited with a female whose genital organs were
-very small. It has often been observed in the newly
-married, and has sometimes occasioned unmerited suspicions
-and reproaches. It is said, too, that excesses
-indulged in by persons whose genital organs are perfectly
-sound, may produce in one or both of them a
-more or less intense blenorrhea. Cullerier and Ratier
-say, that they have verified this fact several times.
-Can such a blenorrhea be communicated? Cassan,
-in the Bulletin Universel of Ferussac, has inserted a
-note, in which he states that many of the facts observed
-in man and animals, particularly of the genus
-Bos, prove, that blenorrhea, which is simply the result
-of venereal excesses between healthy individuals,
-easily assumes a contagious character, and is attended
-with symptoms analogous to those of syphilis, and requires
-the same treatment.</p>
-
-<p>Inflammation of the urethra may become very intense,
-and extend to the bladder, particularly when
-venereal excesses coexist with intemperate habits:
-the discharge of urine may then be interrupted, and
-consequently all the symptoms of dysuria and strangury
-may supervene. Chronic catarrh of the bladder
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_135">135</span>
-is often observed, also, in those individuals who have
-abused the pleasures of love.</p>
-
-<p>Montegre, speaking of a kind of cystitis, which he
-terms <i>vesical hemorrhoids</i>, mentions among its causes
-venereal excesses, and particularly those repeated titillations,
-which keep the genital organs in a state of
-semi-orgasm, which is not terminated by any crisis.</p>
-
-<p>Lallemand reports the case of an individual, who,
-being addicted to venereal excesses, experienced frequent
-desire to urinate, and found it difficult to empty
-his bladder. Finally, unable to pass water without
-the use of a sound, he learned to introduce it himself.
-This was not difficult, although the bladder could not
-be emptied without it. The urine was turbid, thick,
-and deposited a great deal of glairy mucus, which adhered
-to the pot de chambre. The prostatic portion
-of the urethra was cauterized, but without success.
-Lallemand thought that there was a morbid development
-of the middle lobe of the prostate gland. In another
-patient, whose history is given by this excellent
-observer, excessive masturbation appeared to have
-predisposed to a chronic inflammation of the genito-urinary
-organs, which were developed under the influence
-of the abuse of coition. (<i>Obs.</i>, &amp;c., p. 440.)</p>
-
-<p>It is easily seen, that if coition and masturbation
-may cause all these inflammations, so, too, they may
-sustain and increase them. The pleasures of love,
-therefore, should be strictly forbidden to persons affected
-with diseases of the genito-urinary passages.
-Acute inflammation of the urethra, blenorrhagia, has
-often been known to pass to a chronic state by a single
-act of venery; which, says Lewedrain, may even
-cause this change several months after the apparent
-termination of acute blenorrhagia.</p>
-
-<p>May an incontinence of urine be produced by excesses
-in coition or masturbation? We have more
-than once seen this disease in young onanists. Sainte
-Marie, also, places it among the symptoms of daily
-involuntary pollution; and Lallemand has remarked,
-that most individuals affected with this pollution had
-been subject, in their infancy, to incontinence of urine.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_136">136</span>
-May not the relations between these two affections
-extend to the causes which determine them?</p>
-
-<p>One of the most common causes of excesses in venery
-is, the <i>involuntary loss of semen</i>. This disease,
-which has been termed <i>spermatorrhœa</i>, <i>involuntary
-pollution</i>, may also arise from other causes; but
-as it results most frequently from excesses in masturbation
-or coition, we shall devote particular attention
-to it.</p>
-
-<p>Let us consider the mode in which the excretion of
-semen takes place in the normal state. It is the remote
-consequence of a voluntary action, and the immediate
-result of involuntary contractions. The venereal
-sense is excited voluntarily, either by copulation,
-or by applying the hand: this excitement is carried to
-as great an extent as possible; and then a crisis, entirely
-independent of the will, terminates it. This
-crisis occurs sooner or later. It may even be quickened
-or retarded by the will, which may excite or
-modify the venereal sense; but when it does take
-place, it is always by involuntary contractions&mdash;that
-is, by a true convulsion.</p>
-
-<p>This last action has two well marked periods. In
-the first, the semen passes from the seminal vesicles
-into the urethra; in the second, this liquid is violently
-expelled. The contraction of the seminal vesicles&mdash;and
-perhaps, also, that of the levatores ani muscles&mdash;are
-the powers by which the semen comes into the
-urethra. The ejaculation is caused by the muscles
-of the perinœum, and particularly by the bulbo-cavernosus
-muscle. The swelling and hardness of the
-corpus cavernosum furnish this muscle with a point
-of resistance, which enables it to compress more efficiently
-the semen with which the urethra is filled;
-and the straightening of this canal, by the erection,
-renders the expulsion of this fluid more easy. All
-these motions take place by jerks; and, we repeat it,
-convulsively, without the aid of the will.</p>
-
-<p>The involuntary excretion of the semen, the morbid
-pollution, may take place sometimes in the manner
-described, sometimes in another mode. In the first
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_137">137</span>
-case, it differs from what occurs in the normal state,
-only not being preceded by those acts which are performed
-voluntarily by man. Secondly, the semen is
-excreted without any convulsive effort; it flows like
-the tears, the saliva, the bile. The semen comes into
-the urethra, and escapes from it merely because it is
-there. There is no ejaculation: and this is easily
-conceived of; for the genital organs are not sufficiently
-excited, to cause the ejaculatory powers to be convulsed,
-as is proved by the excessive weakness of the
-venereal sensation. And, secondly, one of the indispensable
-conditions of the ejaculation&mdash;erection of
-the penis&mdash;does not exist. There are, then, two kinds
-of involuntary pollutions; one which is <i>convulsive</i>,
-and the other which is <i>not so</i>. Between these two
-kinds, there are intermediate degrees, in which spermatorrhœa
-partakes more or less of one or the other.
-These degrees often mark the passage from convulsive
-spermatorrhœa to that which is not convulsive; for
-the latter has generally been preceded by the former.
-We shall see hereafter, that the existence of one of
-these affections does not forbid that of the other; and
-that the ejaculation of semen is possible in some individuals
-who present habitually an insensible flow of
-this fluid.</p>
-
-<p>Involuntary pollutions have been distinguished until
-now in another manner: they have been divided into
-<i>diurnal</i> and <i>nocturnal</i>. These distinctions are founded
-only on accessory circumstances. What difference
-does it make, whether the pollutions occur by night or
-by day, provided they are similar in other respects?
-If, on the contrary, there are more essential differences,
-why not give to them the importance they demand?
-Farther: is not convulsive spermatorrhœa, like that
-which is not convulsive, seen both at night and day?
-These are the reasons why we have sought to distinguish
-these affections more logically, and which have
-led us to propose the new distinction just mentioned.</p>
-
-<p>Convulsive spermatorrhœa may occur in all individuals,
-and under the influence of a great many causes,
-without being necessarily a disease. After excessive
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_138">138</span>
-continence, it may even prove a salutary crisis. This
-pollution has a pathological character, when it is repeated
-too often, or under unfavorable circumstances;
-and then it produces the same result as excesses in
-coition or masturbation, and generally occurs only in
-individuals already enfeebled by this kind of excess.
-Sleep is the most favorable state for an attack of spermatorrhœa;
-and from this circumstance it is called nocturnal
-pollution. The temperature of the bed, and
-lying on the back&mdash;circumstances which favor the
-warmth and excitement of the lower part of the spinal
-marrow&mdash;may also cause the convulsive excretion of
-the semen. But another cause of it is, that during
-the sleep of the external senses, the internal senses
-have control, and have more power, because the action
-of the others is completely suspended. Cabanis remarks
-this fact, in saying that the genital organs do
-not participate in the repose of the external senses,
-but seem to be more excitable when these are asleep.
-We consider, that what takes place then is analogous
-to what is observed in idiots, who, deaf, blind, and
-dead to all the feelings of relation, abandon themselves
-to every excess, to satisfy a sense, the excitement of
-which in them often amounts to constant satyriasis.</p>
-
-<p>If the sleep be very profound, pollution may take
-place without the consciousness of the patient, or, at
-any rate, without his remembrance of it. When he
-wakes, the loss of semen is then discovered only by its
-stain, and the state of fatigue, weakness, and malaise
-attending it. A lascivious dream, however, generally
-attends a pollution. These dreams are not, as is generally
-thought, the cause of the pollution: if they exist,
-it is because the venereal sense, which is excited,
-speaks for itself, even as hunger, thirst, or any internal
-sensation may do. These dreams have a peculiar
-character, which has been pointed out by many writers.
-The individual is rarely placed in voluptuous circumstances,
-where his imagination places him during his
-waking hours; but he is surrounded by females who
-are hideous and repelling, and whom he is as it were
-compelled to enjoy.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_139">139</span></p>
-
-<p>In fact, these pollutions fatigue more than those
-which are excited voluntarily. On rising, the patient
-experiences a general and more or less distinct feeling
-of feebleness and of suffering. His loins and limbs
-seem as if he had taken a long walk, or as if they had
-been bruised; the countenance is pale; the eyelids
-are swelled and bluish; the patient is sad and stupid.
-Finally, he presents physically and morally the consequences
-of an abuse of venery. It may readily be imagined,
-that the periods of spermatorrhœa render the
-exhaustion more rapid than the voluntary excesses already
-commenced. If, contrary to custom, the onanist
-remains one night without pollution, the organs which
-he permits to rest supply the unaccustomed activity.
-Happy is he, when these symptoms do not seem to
-him an evidence that this flow of semen is necessary.
-Every thing which specially excites the genital organs,
-as lascivious thoughts, voluptuous sights, riding, a soft
-and warm bed, &amp;c., and also every thing which produces
-a more general excitement, in which these organs
-participate, as wine, liquors, coffee, spices, &amp;c.;
-are so many causes which combine with the direct
-provocations of the patient, to multiply the causes by
-which he is excited.</p>
-
-<p>The nocturnal pollutions, however, are not formidable
-to those onanists who are reformed. Inspired by
-the sentiment of self-preservation, warned by the sufferings,
-counsels, and by reading, they have resolved
-to abandon for ever the manœuvres which they know
-to be dangerous. This resolution they will be able to
-keep: they, however, anxiously demand if they are
-not too late. The genital organs rebel against the
-decision. How melancholy must be the state of the
-patient! He sees, in perspective, sufferings, even a
-death, which seems to be inevitable. To avoid it, he
-had made a sacrifice; he has abandoned those tastes
-which exercised such absolute control over him: but
-his organs, which have been irritated, continue the
-work which he wished to interrupt. He is irritated&mdash;he
-despairs. Let him be of good cheer; when the
-will perseveres, it generally triumphs. I attended an
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_140">140</span>
-onanist, who was suddenly converted by reading the
-work of Tissot, and who experienced all the troubles
-to which we have alluded. He was constantly tormented
-by the remembrance of the past night, and the
-fear of that which was to come. He slept on a coarse
-bed; and always enveloped the privy parts with linen,
-wet with vinegar and water, before going to sleep;
-promising himself to awake, as soon as he was assailed
-by dreams. By his will, however, he finally succeeded;
-and he had the power of watching himself during sleep.
-His pollutions gradually became less frequent, and
-finally disappeared entirely. This is generally the
-case where all bad habits cease.</p>
-
-<p>Convulsive spermatorrhœa is not very common,
-while a person is awake: it then rarely presents the
-purely convulsive character, with perfect erection, and
-distinct ejaculation, that is seen in a healthy emission
-of semen. This state, however, is possible: an instance
-of it may be seen in the case of satyriasis stated
-by M. Duprest-Rony. Whenever this young man beheld
-his mistress looking at him, erection took place,
-and ejaculation followed. He, however, had refrained
-from masturbating for two years, and had regained in
-a great measure his former strength. M. Sainte Marie
-has reported a case of priapism, during which the patient
-ejaculated fourteen times in a few hours. But
-this affection was not in consequence of venereal excesses,
-and the emission of semen presented nothing
-more extraordinary than other cases of priapism. Diurnal
-convulsive pollution is seldom accompanied, in
-individuals exhausted by abuses of masturbation and
-coition, with a perfect erection. The size of the penis
-increases, but it does not become hard. The semen
-is then emitted only to a short distance, if there be
-any ejaculation. The least cause, the slightest touch,
-is sufficient to excite this. Thus, in a man thirty years
-old, whom Tissot has mentioned, after Boerhaave, the
-semen escaped whenever there was a commencement
-of an erection, for it was never complete; and instead
-of being expelled forcibly, it oozed out drop by drop.
-The patient became impotent. This symptom (adds
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_141">141</span>
-Tissot) is very frequent among those who are exhausted,
-and it contributes to continue the exhaustion.
-The slightest excitement causes the commencement
-of an erection, which is followed by an emission. We
-have seen a similar phenomenon in one of the patients
-of M. Dalandeterie. There were frequent painful
-erections, of short duration, which always terminated
-by a more or less abundant discharge of fluid. These
-kinds of pollutions were always painful, and were followed
-by extreme prostration. It is evident, from the
-remarks we have quoted, that there was no ejaculation
-in this patient; and probably, also, the erections,
-though painful, were imperfect. Daily convulsive
-spermatorrhœa assumes then, as it were, a bastard
-character in onanists: it occupies an intermediate
-place between proper convulsive spermatorrhœa, such
-as occurs during sleep, and the non-convulsive spermatorrhœa,
-which we shall mention directly.</p>
-
-<p>There is a phenomenon very similar to this bastard
-spermatorrhœa, and which shows itself when the patient
-is inclined to indulge in coition or masturbation:
-the emission of semen takes place on the commencement
-of the act of venery. It is a quasi involuntary
-pollution. In this case, which is by no means rare,
-the erection is not complete, simply because there is
-not time for it to be so, the premature emission of semen
-not admitting it to be perfect. Sometimes, erection
-is radically impossible, and prevents the ejaculation.
-This was the case with the onanist who wrote
-to Tissot, that the semen would flow, but there was
-no ejaculation. Farther: when there is no erection,
-either because this is impossible, or because the semen
-is discharged prematurely, the person becomes impotent,
-because the power of procreating requires erection
-and ejaculation.</p>
-
-<p>In persons affected with spermatorrhœa, the seminal
-fluid must preserve its normal characters. It is generally
-thinner, less opaque, and similar to serum: sometimes
-it resembles a fetid sanies or corrupt mucus; in
-other cases:, the seminal vesicles are evidently affected.
-Sometimes, blood is exhaled from these vesicles, and
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_142">142</span>
-is even ejaculated. We have already stated instances
-of this emission. Tissot, also, has published a case
-of it. It was a young man, less than sixteen years
-old, who indulged in onanism to such an extent, that
-blood was finally emitted, instead of semen. This
-emission was soon followed by excessive pains, and
-an inflammation of all the genital organs. We must
-remark, that blood never seems to be discharged, unless
-the pollution is excited directly: this, at least,
-would seem to follow from the cases stated, and particularly
-from one mentioned by Dalandeterie. The
-erections (said he) always terminate with a more or
-less abundant flow of mucus&mdash;perhaps, also, of prostatic
-fluid, or even of a very diluted semen. In ejaculations
-excited by the hand, a semi-clotted, blackish
-blood comes, instead of semen: sometimes, a teaspoonful
-is discharged. This is always attended with pains,
-and followed by great prostration.</p>
-
-<p>We have seen that involuntary pollution may take
-place, like voluntary pollution, by the convulsive contraction
-of the ejaculatory muscles, with erection of
-the penis, and sensations of venery. We have also
-seen, that the semen may be discharged, although the
-erection of the penis, the sensation of venery, and the
-convulsive contraction of the ejaculatory muscles is
-slight, and almost nothing. When this exists to a still
-greater degree, we have <i>non-convulsive</i> spermatorrhœa,
-or <i>diurnal involuntary pollution</i>, as it is called: here
-there is no erection, convulsion, nor ejaculation; there
-is no feeling of venery; the semen flows, instead of
-being expelled; and there is no feeling of pleasure
-attending this discharge.</p>
-
-<p>This affection may arise from different causes. It
-is owing most frequently to venereal excesses; and,
-as but little is known in regard to it, we shall enlarge
-on the subject. This pollution for a long time was
-confounded with all the discharges from the urethra,
-which were blended under the term gonorrhœa. A
-contrary opinion was then adopted, and the existence
-of the disease was denied <i>in toto</i>. The remarks of
-several authors, and particularly of Wichmann, Sante
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_143">143</span>
-Marie, and Lallemand, place its existence, however,
-beyond a doubt. The first ideas on this kind of spermatorrhœa
-may be referred to the earliest periods of
-medicine. It was known to Hippocrates, who has
-mentioned (<i>De Morbis</i>, lib. ii., sect. 5) one of the
-principal symptoms, the loss of semen, during the
-emission of urine, and of feces, when describing the
-tabes dorsalis which affects libertines and those lately
-married. Celsus, also, (<i>De Medicina</i>, lib. iv., ch. 28,)
-has admitted that there may be loss of semen, without
-pleasure, without voluptuous dreams, and which may
-be followed by a fatal consumption. After this, we
-find no mention of the disease for a long period.
-Tauvry says positively, (<i>Naw. Anat. raisonn&eacute;e</i>, 1693, p.
-164,) that men who abuse themselves are liable to have
-emissions of semen on the slightest compression of
-the seminal vesicles, when they pass urine or feces.
-Morgagni admits that the semen may escape without
-any pleasurable sensation, as happens from the effect
-of an injection which is too warm, and from the excretion
-of hardened feces; but he adds, that the fluid
-discharged may come in some from the prostate gland,
-in others, from the seminal vesicles. There is much
-uncertainty on this point of science among authors,
-many of whom have considered as spermatic most of
-the discharges from the urethra. The dissertation of
-Wichmann, however, on the subject of diurnal pollution,
-is valuable. This dissertation was printed in
-1782, at Gœttingen. In it, Wichmann states, first, the
-characters which distinguish diurnal from nocturnal
-pollution. The first occurs when the patient is awake,
-and without his experiencing erection or desire. He
-is unconscious of it; and this circumstance, with the
-absence of any swelling of the corpora cavernosa, and
-of all venereal ardor, serves to distinguish this pollution
-from the flow of the fluid of the prostate gland,
-or from a loss of semen, which takes place in some
-persons when they are excited by desire. To these
-characters, Wichmann adds another, drawn from the
-mode in which the excretion of semen takes place.
-In diurnal pollution, (says he,) men do not lose their
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_144">144</span>
-semen constantly by a continual excretion of this fluid,
-like females subject to leucorrhea; but they ejaculate,
-at a single time: and this circumstance has rendered
-the term pollution applicable to this disease. He does
-not consider, as a diurnal pollution, the gonorrhœa in
-which the semen is continually escaping drop by drop.
-He, however, doubts the existence of this last affection,
-and remarks that authors are very much confused
-on the subject. Nor would a pollution which was involuntary,
-and during the hours of waking, be considered
-as a diurnal pollution, if the evacuation of semen
-had been caused by any aphrodisiac substance. And
-on this topic, he relates the case of a man, who, having
-been addicted to onanism in his youth, was affected
-with involuntary pollutions if a blister was applied to
-him, if he perceived the odor of cantharides, or even
-spoke of them.</p>
-
-<p>According to Wichmann, the semen never escapes
-with the urine: thus, it is not a seminal discharge
-which comes from persons affected with external or
-internal hemorrhoids, who pass off with their urine a
-milky fluid. He, however, admits, with Hippocrates,
-that the straining of persons at stool often occasions,
-in those affected with diurnal pollution, the discharge
-of a greater or less quantity of semen. When the existence
-of this affection is suspected, we must attempt
-to ascertain its truth; and for this purpose, the patient
-should be made to urinate freely; and then, in passing
-the feces, he should sit in such a manner that the penis
-may be outside, and one can see all that escapes
-from it in the efforts at stool. In a diurnal pollution,
-there is rarely as much semen lost as in a nocturnal
-pollution. The disease is quite as serious, if it be
-semen which escapes&mdash;if it occurs once a-day, and
-even more frequently; and at the lightest effort to
-stool, and without any pleasure, to inform one of the
-risk which is run.</p>
-
-<p>Thus, then, involuntary emissions of semen, while
-the patient is awake, without erection, without pleasure,
-and while the patient is ignorant of it; an emission
-which takes place, not drop by drop, but at one time,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_145">145</span>
-and especially while at stool, are, according to Wichmann,
-specific characters of involuntary diurnal pollution.</p>
-
-<p>The general effects of this diurnal pollution, as he
-has often observed them, are those seen in onanists.
-He remarks:&mdash;When you see a man extremely thin,
-pale, stupid, enervated, complaining of great debility,
-especially in the thighs and loins, lazy in his actions,
-and with sunken eyes, you have reason to suspect this
-cause.</p>
-
-<p>Patients in this state never complain of any absolute
-pain. Their digestive powers are ruined: the appetite,
-however, continues&mdash;even increases, and sometimes
-becomes voracious. After taking food, they seem
-to have more strength; but this advantage is soon paid
-for, by the inconveniences resulting from digestion&mdash;especially
-if that variable appetite be too much indulged.
-As the stomach and most of the other viscera
-do not perform their functions properly, the more
-that is eaten the more the belly is tumefied, by the relaxation
-of the digestive organs. This swelling is
-attended with a painful feeling of anxiety, which exists
-in these unfortunates at other periods of the day,
-and impels them to avoid society. They are more
-disposed to sorrow than to joy&mdash;that is, the news
-of an unfortunate event brings with it more sorrow
-than that of a happy event causes pleasure. In them,
-as in onanists, there is a want of intelligence; they
-are stupid; natural sleep does not refresh them; the
-memory and sight are particularly debilitated. And
-this is the state of things, until the patient becomes
-affected with phthisis. At first, neither moral causes,
-nor affections of the soul, nor disappointment, can be
-suspected. There is apparently no viscus affected;
-nor can we ascribe the disease to any deleterious substance
-concealed in the body, and consuming the flesh.
-The patient has no pain, excepting that obtuse, compressive
-pain, which is referred to the hypochondria,
-and which depends on the swelling of the weak intestines.
-If you add to the characters the absence of
-fever, and of the ordinary causes of exhaustion, you
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_146">146</span>
-may be persuaded that diurnal pollution exists&mdash;that
-it is the hidden cause of all the symptoms. This is a
-general description of the disease, drawn up from a
-considerable number of cases which we have observed.</p>
-
-<p>Wichmann, also, remarks the resemblance between
-individuals affected with diurnal pollution and those
-affected with phthisis pulmonalis. Experience has
-taught me, (says he,) that in many patients who have
-been considered as affected with true phthisis, the disease
-must be referred to this cause alone. The symptoms
-of diurnal pollution are not very dissimilar to
-those of the first period of phthisis pulmonalis, at
-this purely spasmodic period, which I should be tempted
-to term insidious, if I considered merely the difficulty
-and uncertainty of the diagnosis at this period. The
-cough which then attends some patients, also, leads
-physicians to dread phthisis: or, rather, consumption,
-arising from diurnal pollution, assumes so much the
-characters and form of this disease, that one is disposed
-to treat it by the ordinary method, to the great disparagement
-of the patient, whose state requires opposite
-remedies. Farther: it is clear, that the disease of
-which we speak must infallibly terminate in phthisis,
-if it be not soon arrested.</p>
-
-<p>In 1772, Wichmann observed internal pollution for
-the first time. The case was that of a young man,
-over twenty years of age, who for a long time had
-been affected with spasms. “He was manifestly in a
-state of cachochymia, and of wasting away. The
-physicians whom he had consulted before he came to
-me judged, from these appearances, that he was hypochondriac:
-in fact, different symptoms led to the belief
-that the disease was situated in the hypochondria.
-The loss of strength&mdash;the languor of digestion, although
-the appetite was not lost&mdash;the paleness of the
-countenance&mdash;the sadness and pusillanimity which
-led him to seek solitude&mdash;the vivid redness which
-rushed over his cheeks in conversation&mdash;his restlessness
-of character&mdash;and, finally, a certain weakness of
-intellect&mdash;seemed to justify the diagnosis. He had
-formerly indulged with females, and had been affected
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_147">147</span>
-with venereal disease, to which he attributed his present
-state. Although there was not the slightest trace
-of these old affections, the physician, misled by the
-false conjectures of the patient, had kept him for a
-long time on mercurial preparations, by which the
-symptoms were aggravated, the true cause being overlooked.</p>
-
-<p>“Mercury was then abandoned for tonics; and the
-ferruginous waters were employed, with the idea that
-the patient suffered from hypochondria. But this was
-no better than the former treatment; and the patient
-begged me to take charge of him. I could not attribute
-the extreme thinness which existed to the remnant
-of an imperfectly cured venereal affection, nor to the
-usual cause of exhaustion and fever. I then asked the
-patient if he indulged with females, or in onanism;
-or if he was affected with involuntary loss of semen.
-He almost swore to the contrary. I then told him of
-his obligation to speak the truth, and assured him that
-I should not prescribe for him until he was attentively
-examined. Some days after, he came to me again,
-and told me that he had been affected with something
-like loss of semen. I satisfied myself that the observation
-was correct. The cause of the evil being
-known, the treatment was simple. In a few months,
-the patient was restored to health; and this happy
-effect of the remedies proved that we had attacked the
-origin of the evil.</p>
-
-<p>“This young man had probably indulged in premature
-excesses: in fact, this is the most usual cause of
-involuntary pollution. All the patients observed by
-me, (says Wichmann,) were from twenty-five to forty
-years old. All were addicted to the pleasures of love,
-or to onanism; or had become affected with blenorrhœa,
-by intercourse with diseased women.</p>
-
-<p>“I am led to believe,” (adds he,) “that the effects of
-onanism would not be so pernicious, were it not for
-this diurnal pollution; that without it, this shameful
-habit would not be followed with consumption, and
-other symptoms of phthisis. In fact, onanism does
-not always give rise to this pollution. If this were
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_148">148</span>
-the case, the number of onanists affected with consumption
-would be very great. The number of men
-addicted to this vice from early childhood is immense;
-for we do not know a greater scourge than this social
-corruption. From the fact, too, that onanism sometimes
-produces involuntary diurnal pollution, we ought
-to investigate if it does not exist in those who have
-renounced this pernicious habit. Advice to them would
-be useless, inasmuch as, having renounced this vice,
-they do not suspect the enervating cause which destroys
-them. About eighteen years ago, before I had discovered
-this cause of consumption, I knew a young man,
-thirty years old, who had been addicted to masturbation
-from the time he was ten years old, and who
-learned this pernicious habit from his preceptor. He
-died, after experiencing all kinds of infirmities, with
-extreme debility of all his physical and moral faculties.
-He acknowledged his error, and that for a long time
-he had renounced his bad habit; but his late return to
-continence did not save him. Now, I feel confident
-that this shameful habit had brought on an involuntary
-diurnal pollution, which caused his death.”</p>
-
-<p>Wichmann remarks, that it is at the commencement
-of the fine season of spring that the patients are most
-conscious of their situation. They owe this increase of
-their ills (says he) to that general procreative faculty
-which becomes more active in all animated beings at
-this period of the year. The more full the vesicles of
-semen, the more liable are patients to lose it. We
-must also remark, that most patients secrete prolific
-semen, and preserve their procreative power. This,
-however, requires the patient to have the faculty of
-erection; for, otherwise, he would be impotent. This
-was the case with an individual, whose case is stated
-by Henry Van-Hers.</p>
-
-<p>A young man of rich family, and who had arrived
-at puberty, consulted this physician, avowing, that
-from the time he was ten years old, he had enjoyed
-frequent intercourse with young girls, who had excited
-him by their lascivious touches; adding, that from this
-period the power of erection had disappeared. He had
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_149">149</span>
-travelled for a long time, and had received advice from
-several French physicians. He went to the Spa waters,
-and there his case was examined by Van-Hers.
-The sensibility and weakness of the genital organs
-were so great, that on the slightest touch, and without
-any desire for coition, or any sensation, there was a
-discharge similar to thin milk. This excretion continued
-both night and day, whenever he passed urine,
-or on the least rubbing of his shirt. A great many
-remedies had already been tried. Van-Hers regarded
-the disease as incurable, but the young man would not
-listen to his advice; and being very rich, he continued
-to travel in Italy, France, England, and Germany, in
-the hope of recovering his lost virility. He consulted
-many physicians. He then had recourse to quacks;
-and even tried the powers of magic: but all in vain.
-After six years of travel, he returned to Van-Hers,
-regretting that he had not taken his advice. The
-young man then returned home, deploring the advantages
-of a large fortune, which rendered him the victim
-of a precocious abuse of pleasure, of a kind of premature
-depravity.</p>
-
-<p>Wichmann’s dissertation was but little known in
-France, when Sainte Marie undertook its translation;
-and not only this, but added many important notes,
-which have shed new light on diurnal pollution.
-Wichmann had said, as we have seen, that patients
-affected with this disease <i>ejaculated</i> the semen. This
-expression was inexact, and has been rectified by M.
-Sainte Marie. The patients (said he) do not ejaculate
-the semen; but it runs away from them: it is not emitted
-with force. The characters which it presents had
-briefly been alluded to by Wichmann: his translator
-has stated them more clearly. According to him, the
-semen which runs away in diurnal pollution is paler,
-thinner, and more watery, than that which escapes
-when the act is attended with pleasure. Its odor,
-also, is fainter; and the stains it leaves on the linen
-are slight, superficial, and not very apparent. Wichmann
-had admitted the existence of a discharge from
-the prostate gland, which ought not to be confounded
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_150">150</span>
-with diurnal pollution. Sainte Marie has attempted
-to point out the characteristics of this discharge.
-Those in whom it exists, (says he,) find the glans
-moistened in the morning when they rise with an
-unctuous substance: if they then compress the urethra
-from the root to the end of the penis, they press out
-some drops of a greenish, gluish, and slightly fetid
-fluid. They thus lose a little of this fluid after indulging
-in desires, or after erections which have not
-been followed by the act of venery. Sainte Marie considers
-it as probable that the mucus of the urethra
-then mixes with the fluid of the prostate gland, and
-forms a part of the discharge.</p>
-
-<p>This author confirms Wichmann’s remarks on the
-general effects of diurnal pollution. He says, “Since
-I read his treatise, I have found this pollution in
-diseases of languor, which I could not attribute to a
-special or primitive alteration of any organ; and I
-have discovered, that a great many cases of hypochondria,
-of slow nervous fevers, of consumptions, were
-kept up by this kind of gonorrhœa, to which the patients,
-unable to observe themselves, had paid no attention.
-I have known several individuals, who have
-been affected with this diurnal pollution for a long
-time, without experiencing any marked derangement
-in their health: to them, it was an inconvenience;
-rather than a disease. But in these cases, diurnal
-pollution is not habitual: it only occurs when continence
-of days or weeks, an exciting or substantial regimen,
-long exercise on horseback or in a carriage, have
-accumulated semen in its reservoirs, or have irritated
-specially the genital organs: then the least effort to
-expel the feces causes the seminal vesicles to pour
-forth the surplus of fluid which they contain. Let
-not this state inspire too much security. Diurnal pollution
-is commenced: it is not yet serious; but it may
-progress, return every day at each evacuation, and
-finally produce all the bad results noticed by Wichmann.”</p>
-
-<p>Wichmann said nothing in regard to the organic
-conditions of the diurnal pollution: he merely stated
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_151">151</span>
-that this affection was the result of debility. M. Sainte
-Marie, on this point, makes many interesting remarks.
-He considers diurnal pollution as sometimes the cause,
-and sometimes the effect, of dorsal consumption; and
-he considers this to be an affection of the spinal marrow.
-We will quote this passage:&mdash;Diurnal pollution
-(says Sainte Marie) is sometimes only an effect;
-the origin of which must be sought after in a serious
-and primitive alteration of an important system of organs.
-Thus, we must reason, for instance, in respect
-to dorsal consumption. It is said, that one remarkable
-symptom of this disease is an abundant discharge of
-watery semen, which comes sometimes at each emission
-of urine. Involuntary diurnal pollution is here
-only a symptom: it occurs, because the genital organs
-do not receive, <i>from the spinal marrow</i>, the nervous
-and well regulated influence which they require to
-perform their functions properly. Hence, the super-abundant
-secretion of semen&mdash;its unfitness for fecundation&mdash;the
-relaxation of the seminal vesicles, which
-allow it to escape so readily&mdash;the atony of the scrotum&mdash;the
-inconvenient pulling of the spermatic vessels&mdash;the
-weakness of the erections&mdash;impotence, &amp;c., &amp;c.
-The same state of the organs which deprives the genital
-organs of life, explains, on the other hand, the
-wasting of parts which respond to this sensitive centre&mdash;the
-thinness of the loins, thighs, and lower extremities&mdash;the
-debility&mdash;the paralysis of these extremities&mdash;the
-obstinate constipation, complained of by the patients,
-and which is similar to that of old men, yielding
-only to the employment of stimuli&mdash;the formications
-along the back&mdash;the incontinence of urine&mdash;the
-gangrenous eschars, which at a more advanced period
-of the disease form on the sacrum, hips, and trochanters.
-We might easily pursue this subject, and extend
-it to the most general symptoms of consumption,
-as deep melancholy, weakness and slowness of the
-pulse, disposition to faint, and all those marked symptoms
-which assimilate this disease to slow nervous
-fever; but this would estrange us from the principle
-we seek to establish&mdash;which is, that diurnal pollution
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_152">152</span>
-is sometimes the cause, and sometimes only the symptom,
-of dorsal consumption. Wichmann has treated
-only of the first: the second is connected with a general
-disease, and cannot be studied separately. These
-remarks of Sainte Marie will be admitted to be much
-more important, if compared with our remarks on the
-abuse of the genital organs on the spinal marrow, and
-with what we shall say hereafter on the power which
-this has on the same organs.</p>
-
-<p>Swediaur, who was acquainted with and approved
-of Wichmann’s work, admits, in addition to the diurnal
-pollution described by this latter, and which he
-considers as arising either from relaxation or from irritation
-of the testicles and seminal passages&mdash;he admits,
-we say, a blenorrhœa of the prostate gland, the
-characters of which, as stated by him, are precisely
-similar to those of diurnal pollution. Blenorrhœa of
-the prostate gland (says he) is a morbid discharge of
-the mucus from this gland, sometimes mingled with
-the fluid of the seminal vesicles. It occurs particularly
-during the day, and without venereal desire.
-This disease is soon followed with general debility or
-weakness: this exhaustion is attended with emaciation
-of the body, and is followed by death, if the patient
-delays consulting a well-educated physician, as
-is too often the case; or if the proper remedies are
-not used in time. He admits, also, that the discharge
-from the prostate gland does not occur in some individuals,
-except when they go to stool; and that hardened
-feces, in passing through the rectum, press the
-prostate gland more firmly. The discharge is clear
-mucus, and of a particularly nauseous odor. Cullerier
-describes two kinds of spermatorrhœa: one with loss
-of semen and of the prostate fluid; the other, produced
-by constipation. He remarks&mdash;Persons who are habitually
-costive often see a few drops of semen ooze from
-the penis, while they are at stool. We have been
-consulted several times for cases of this kind. Some
-regard it as resulting from a relaxation, a debility of
-the genital organs: they imagine that their genital
-powers are lost, and that their procreative power is
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_153">153</span>
-lost. Others attribute it to old blenorrhœas, which
-have <i>struck in</i>, as it is said. All, generally, are terrified
-at the effect; and quacks have often profited by
-its existence, to persuade patients that they were affected
-with an inveterate venereal disease, and thus to
-dispose of their remedies. This effect arises, as every
-one knows, from the pressure of the feces in the rectum
-on the seminal vesicles, and may be removed by
-removing the constipation.</p>
-
-<p>This was the state of science, when Lallemand devoted
-himself to the study of the diseases of the urinary
-passages, and enriched it with many important
-remarks. As, in acute inflammations of the urethra,
-the irritation sometimes extends, following the course
-of the seminal passages to the testicles; so, in retentions
-of urine, produced by chronic inflammation of
-the prostatic portion of the urethra, the irritation extends
-more or less to the seminal vesicles and testicles,
-producing in the former normal contractions, and in
-the latter an excessive secretion, whence would result
-a spermatic flux. In patients thus affected, the ejaculation
-is very sudden: nocturnal pollutions are frequent&mdash;or,
-rather, the semen is expelled during the
-emission of urine, and of the feces. It is also more
-liquid, less odorous, and in short less elaborated than
-usual. In many patients, the venereal desires are
-nearly extinct; the erections are feeble, imperfect, or
-even impossible. This spermatorrhœa has general
-effects, analogous to those which have been attributed
-to other pollutions: the patients become timid, idle,
-indifferent to all which is not connected with their
-disease; all the functions of the economy languish,
-and are deranged; and, finally, both body and mind
-are degraded.</p>
-
-<p>Lallemand has known all the phenomena which we
-have described to disappear, on curing the retention of
-urine&mdash;or, rather, the disease of the urethra which
-caused it&mdash;and relates cases of this character. Do
-not the remarks of this practitioner, compared with
-our remarks on convulsive spermatorrhœa, and particularly
-on the different states which the semen may
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_154">154</span>
-present in this affection&mdash;do they not establish clearly,
-that in many, perhaps in most cases of spermatorrhœa,
-there is not relaxation, weakness of the seminal vesicles
-and ejaculatory ducts, but irritation or inflammation
-of these parts?</p>
-
-<p>It would, then, seem well established, that the semen
-may be discharged without pleasure, without
-erection, and without ejaculation; and that this discharge
-may give rise to accidents analogous to those
-observed after all free discharges of this fluid, arising
-from any cause whatever. This fact, however, has
-been contested by different authors. Boerhaave says
-positively, that he has never known the semen to escape
-spontaneously, without solicitation; and that
-when such a case has been suspected, the fluid discharged
-was not probably semen; and that, farther,
-if this kind of spermatorrhœa exists, it must be very
-rare. Swammerdam, Hunter, and Haller, have expressed
-a similar opinion: the latter admits that a
-discharge may take place from the penis, under the
-circumstances mentioned above; he thinks, also, that
-this discharge comes from the prostate gland and
-seminal vesicles. But the fluid which escapes is only
-the mucus secreted by these parts&mdash;it is not semen;
-and unless opinions had been made up from wrong
-evidence, wrong consequences, it would not have been
-attributed to it. At present, the opinion that all cases
-of spermatorrhœa are only blenorrhœas, is still very
-prevalent. Descamps, physician at Castilliones, having
-brought before the Medical Society, in 1821, two
-cases of spermatorrhœa, the consequences of masturbation;
-Chantourelle, who was the reporter, raised some
-doubts, which the society seemed to admit, as to the
-nature of the discharge, thinking it was mucous, rather
-than spermatic. We, however, are disposed to think,
-that when the subject of diurnal pollution is better
-understood, it will be observed more frequently, and
-then its existence will not be denied. It is with the
-hope of contributing to this result, that we have dwelt
-so long on the subject.</p>
-
-<p>If the imperceptible loss of semen may be followed
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_155">155</span>
-by all the symptoms which are referred to it, it is evident
-that those authors who have advanced that the
-emission of semen should be counted as nothing in
-the influence of the act of venery, and that the nervous
-disturbance which attends it is the only cause of its
-consequences&mdash;those authors, we say, who assert this,
-have advanced too positive an opinion, and are consequently
-mistaken. The same may be said of those
-who ascribe the danger of venereal excesses simply
-to the discharge of urine. It is well ascertained, that
-those individuals who have carried the act of onanism
-to such an extent as to procure enjoyment without
-losing semen, have finally became diseased, and their
-constitution has been impaired. Instances of this
-might be cited. Fournier and Begin mention that of
-a young man, who, at the moment of ejaculation, compressed
-the remote parts of the urethra, so that not a
-drop of semen was lost. The fatigue, however, following
-efforts of this kind was very great, notwithstanding
-these exertions. Finally, the strength diminished,
-and the person wasted away as much as if
-the semen had been discharged. (<i>Dict. des Sc. Med.</i>,
-Art. <i>Masturbation</i>.)</p>
-
-<p>There is frequently some derangement in the functions
-of the testicles, in those who have lost the genital
-sense, where the penis is no longer capable of
-erection, or who are affected by one or other of the
-pollutions mentioned by us. But these organs may
-be affected more evidently. In many onanists, these
-parts are extremely tender, or more or less vivid pains
-are felt, which extend along the cord. These symptoms
-sometimes assume an evidently neuralgic character;
-and it may readily be imagined, that, in individuals
-affected with wandering pains, excesses in
-venery may fix them in these parts. This has been
-remarked in gout. Hall&eacute; and M. Guilbert observed,
-in a middle-aged man addicted to excesses of this
-character, a severe pain in the left testicle, unattended
-by swelling, which extended to the whole surface of
-this organ: this pain followed an attack of articular
-gout. Irritation of the testicles sometimes constitutes
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_156">156</span>
-an attack of orchitis&mdash;that is, an inflammation, which,
-among other consequences, may be attended with the
-loss of these parts. Brodie has published two cases
-of this character. The first was that of a young man,
-thirty years old, who entered St. George’s Hospital
-in 1805, affected with pains in the left testicle. This
-testicle was soft, flabby, and one third smaller than
-that of the opposite side. The patient had never received
-a blow on this part, nor had he been affected
-with blenorrhœa; but he admitted, that for five years
-he had been addicted to onanism, and that a day seldom
-passed without his indulgence. Before wasting
-away, the testicle had been the seat of a swelling,
-which had been preceded by severe pains. These
-pains had continued to be felt, and the disease was
-attended with such a degree of moral depression, that
-the countenance of the patient assumed a sombre and
-melancholy character. This young man was treated
-by various remedies, but he left the hospital uncured.
-The other patient, on applying to Mr. Brodie, in 1820,
-was thirty-one years old. Here the two testicles were
-wasted, and the patient was impotent. This man
-stated that his intercourse with females began when
-he was fourteen years old; that he had indulged excessively
-for many years; that, when twenty years
-old, in consequence of external violence, he was affected
-with severe inflammation of the testicles; that
-this inflammation had been completely cured; and
-that the wasting of the testicles had commenced some
-time afterward. In three years, the testicles had
-shrunk to their present size. (<i>London Med. and Phys.
-Journal</i>, October, 1826.)</p>
-
-<p>According to Morgagni, the too frequent return of
-venereal ideas will produce varicocele and hydrocele.
-Some authors, also, place venereal excesses among
-the causes of the first of these two diseases, and also
-of circosele. We have seen several cases of varicose
-dilatation of the spermatic cord and testicle in onanists.
-This fact is also confirmed by Breschet, in his
-memoir read at the Academy of Sciences, Jan. 13th,
-1834. He thinks that circosele and varicocele are by
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_157">157</span>
-no means diseases of adult and old age, but that they
-are seen most frequently in young men. These affections
-seem to him to be caused most particularly by
-venereal excesses. He adds, that the varicose tumors
-of the burs&aelig;, and the organs they contain, are not only
-very troublesome, causing severe pain in the cord, but
-that in some patients they cause extreme melancholy.</p>
-
-<p>One consequence of onanism, which has been omitted
-by Deslandes, may be stated here. We allude to
-the smallness of the genital organs. In several severe
-cases of onanism, which have fallen under the notice
-of Dr. A. Sidney Doane, of New-York, this important
-feature has been observed. The same fact has been
-remarked by Professor John W. Francis, of New-York;
-Professor Otto, of Germany; and by other
-eminent pathologists.</p>
-
-<p>Excesses in masturbation and coition, <i>in females</i>,
-cause affection of the several organs much more frequently
-than in males. By too frequent titillation,
-the clitoris may become enormously large. This
-cause (says Bouillaud) may determine schirrous engorgement,
-or even a cancerous degenerescence of this
-organ. The most frequent alteration, however, of the
-genital organs of the female, which may be thus produced,
-is an inflammation of the membrane which
-lines the vulva and vagina. This inflammation is constantly
-indicated by a more or less abundant leucorrhœal
-discharge, and often by swelling, redness, and
-pain. When this discharge continues, which is often the
-case, it occasions in young females symptoms analogous
-to those of diurnal pollution. The complexion
-loses its color, and becomes yellowish; the eyes are
-constantly suffused, and the countenance is sad; the
-patients are feeble and careless; they generally experience
-gnawing sensations in the epigastric region;
-and, thinking that these are occasioned by hunger, are
-constantly eating. Sometimes, the appetite is voracious,
-and the digestive powers are preserved; but
-these are commonly soon altered. Severe and constant
-pains are often felt in the back and epigastrium;
-the body wastes; and a short, dry, and frequent cough,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_158">158</span>
-renders the patient, parents, and sometimes the physician,
-anxious as to the state of the chest. Add to
-these symptoms those already described, when speaking
-of the general effects of masturbation, and you
-have the state most frequently presented by girls addicted
-to this habit.</p>
-
-<p>As females have no testicles, nor organs which, like
-the testicles in the male, serve to prepare and excrete
-the semen, they cannot have seminal pollutions: they,
-however, like men, are subject to voluptuous dreams,
-and then there may be a secretion, analogous to that
-which exists in them at the moment of the act of venery.
-May a too frequent return of this symptom
-have any influence on the health? The only remarks
-on the subject, to our knowledge, are to be found in
-Swediaur. He says, when speaking of diurnal pollution&mdash;I
-have seen, although much more rarely, similar
-diseases in the other sex. I have under treatment, at
-this moment, a female, twenty-eight years old, who,
-since her miscarriage, a year and a half ago, suffers
-from frequent involuntary nocturnal pollutions, excited
-by libidinous dreams, and attended with all the symptoms
-of the tabes dorsalis, described by Hippocrates,
-as a disease of the male. Even the lungs begin to
-feel this disease. She, however, has been cured.</p>
-
-<p>Inflammation of the external organs of generation,
-and the fluor albus, resulting from it, is most generally,
-at least in young girls who have not arrived at puberty,
-a consequence of onanism. We are convinced, too,
-that if it were possible to arrive at the facts, we should
-find that the cause of fluor albus in adults was either
-recent or former abuses. Whenever we have addressed
-females on the subject, to ascertain this fact, our conjectures
-have been verified. This has frequently been
-the case with servant girls. We have seen several,
-who were so weakened by fluor albus, and the irritation
-of the sexual parts, that they have been obliged
-to quit their situations, being unable to do their duty.
-We will even say, that the most sincere of these girls
-have given me such information as to their habits, that
-we suspect most of this class of onanism.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_159">159</span></p>
-
-<p>Besides, all authors who have spoken of leucorrhœa
-and blenorrhœa in females, have mentioned excesses
-in masturbation and coition as among their most frequent
-causes. It would be easy to adduce general
-evidence and special cases in support of this proposition;
-but this would be useless.</p>
-
-<p>For the same reasons, we may state, that diseases
-of the uterus may very frequently be determined by
-these excesses, and more particularly by those of coition.
-Daily observation proves that acute and chronic
-inflammations of the body and neck of the uterus
-frequently appear in those females who have indulged
-in premature enjoyments.</p>
-
-<p>We have attended, for more than ten years, a lady
-affected with chronic metritis, arising from this cause.
-This lady had began to masturbate before she was
-eleven years old. She soon became affected with
-fluor albus, from which she has never been free since.
-When eighteen years old, she married a vigorous man,
-and then became addicted to another kind of excess.
-She now experienced constant pains in the loins,
-lower part of the belly, and in the groins: she was
-also troubled with a disagreeable feeling of fatigue in
-the upper part of the thighs, and experienced as it
-were a weight, as if something was constantly trying
-to escape from the sexual parts. The neck of the
-uterus, instead of retaining its usual situation, proved
-on examination to be almost at the external orifice of
-the vagina. Our advice, as to moderation and abstinence,
-was but imperfectly followed: she was so addicted
-to onanism, that, although she indulged lawfully,
-and was the mother of several children, she continued
-in this habit. It may readily be imagined that
-she did not derive much benefit from my advice: in
-fact, the symptoms mentioned above, and many others,
-still continue. Similar cases are related by other
-authors, and have fallen under the notice of almost
-every practitioner.</p>
-
-<p>In this case, there was evidently <i>prolapsus uteri</i>,
-or a falling of the womb: the neck of the uterus was
-almost at the vulva. This displacement, which is the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_160">160</span>
-usual consequence of inflammations of the body of
-the uterus, very often results, like it, from venereal
-excesses. This fact has been noticed by all writers
-on this subject. Schirrous and cancerous affections
-of the neck of the uterus, also, arise from this cause.
-Cullerier remarks, that uterine affections in females
-are loo frequently the sad and cruel consequence of
-solitary manœuvres. Richerand, after stating that
-premature or too frequent indulgence is a cause of
-cancer of the uterus, says, that of forty-seven females
-affected with this disease, eleven had indulged with
-males before the period of puberty, seven at this period,
-and most of them were barren. He adds, that those
-public girls who escape venereal disease generally die
-of cancer of the uterus. Bayle and Cayol have attempted
-to verify this assertion, by examining numerous
-cases, but they have obtained no marked result;
-which is not surprising, considering the number of
-causes, which, especially in hospitals, render such investigations
-useless. The influence of excessive indulgence,
-in producing such a disease, is very great.
-A short time since, we were called to a lady, who had
-a slight syphilitic ulceration of the neck of the uterus.
-She, however, still admitted the embraces of her husband,
-although they were painful, and were followed
-by a discharge of blood. The parenchyma of the
-neck, around the ulceration, was gradually engorged:
-it became schirrous, then cancerous, and the patient
-finally died. Probably, coition had great influence in
-developing this disease. Such a thing might happen
-frequently; for Ricord has shown, that superficial
-ulcerations of the neck of the uterus are frequent.
-The cancers which affect these parts, in public women,
-are, probably, often produced in this manner.</p>
-
-<p>In the lady whose case has been mentioned, the act
-of coition produced a discharge of blood from the vulva.
-We have seen cases of a similar character, where the
-neck of the uterus presented no evidence of organic
-alteration to the touch. Females in whom this occurs
-should, however, be very careful in their pleasures, as
-this slight accident indicates a bad state of the system,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_161">161</span>
-and one which should be mistrusted. Sometimes,
-blood appears on return of coition, when females have
-not indulged for a long time. Rondelon cites an instance
-of this. It occurred in a lady from whom her
-husband had been absent for three years: at the end
-of this period, he returned. The frequency of coition
-the first night caused excessive uterine hemorrhage.
-A similar accident may result from this act, and a fortiori
-from its abuse, during or just before the menstrual
-period. Very serious hemorrhages have often occurred
-in consequence of excessive copulations. Tissot
-states&mdash;In 1746, a girl, twenty-three years old, submitted
-to the embraces of six Spanish dragoons, at a
-house near the gates of Montpelier. She died the
-next day, from excessive hemorrhage of the uterus.
-A similar case has been related by Virey. We know
-(said he) that a public woman, who submitted in one
-night to twenty-one soldiers, the next day died, with
-hemorrhage of the uterus. This was a dark, thin
-woman, in the flower of her age. (<i>Dict. des Sc. Med.</i>,
-vol. xiv., p. 339.) Onanism causes in young women,
-and even in children, a discharge of blood from the
-vulva. This fact was mentioned by Duges. The
-blood lost is then never abundant, and the occurrence
-is by no means serious.</p>
-
-<p>The irritation produced or kept up by too frequent
-coition, is very often the cause of sterility. Even as,
-generally speaking, an inflamed surface refuses to absorb
-substances applied to it, so irritation of the uterus
-and vagina renders them unfit for impregnation. Thus,
-then, libertinism, instead of adding, as we might
-think, to the chances of fecundation, acts in a contrary
-manner. Marc remarks, that two hundred public girls
-do not produce more than two or three children annually.
-Farther: it seems well ascertained, that if these
-girls resume a regular life, they again become fruitful.
-The English, wishing to people Botany Bay, transported
-there a large number of public women. Those
-who were sterile in their own country proved fruitful,
-when subjected to the rigid laws of marriage. Is it
-not notorious, too, that among the public girls, those
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_162">162</span>
-who bear children are not those most frequently liable
-to become mothers? De Chanes, physician at Macon,
-has established, by statistical researches, that but few
-conceptions take place in the early months of marriage&mdash;that
-is, when the congress of the sexes is most
-frequent, and causes the most irritation. Villerm&eacute; has
-ascertained the same to be true in the early days, and
-even the early weeks, after marriage. Hence, this
-learned physician regards the fecundity of copulations
-as being inversely as their frequency. It may, then,
-be stated as a fact, that females may become barren,
-in consequence of venereal abuses.</p>
-
-<p>These abuses are not only injurious, as opposing
-reproduction, but they also injure, by causing a deterioration
-of the human family. Marc asserts, that the
-few children born of prostitutes rarely have the strength
-and health of those born in lawful wedlock; and that
-the mortality of the former is fifty per cent greater
-than of the latter. Too early marriages are attended
-with results similar to those arising from libertinism.
-Aristotle mentioned this fact. Delafontaine, first surgeon
-of the last king of Poland, attributes the extreme
-physical debility of the Polish Jews to these premature
-marriages. Marc says&mdash;It is proved, that the
-physical strength of the child depends, in the main,
-on the mother, rather than on the father; and this is
-confirmed, too, by referring to domestic animals. The
-height of the pony depends on the mare, rather than
-on the stallion. Mules, too, furnish a striking proof
-of this. The eggs of pullets, whatever may be the
-size of the cock, are much smaller than those of hens.
-Farther: it is well known, that females who become
-mothers before attaining their strength, generally give
-birth to small children, which are raised with difficulty.</p>
-
-<p>We have seen in a former page, that men had recourse
-to artificial means to procure a semblance of
-coition. Accidents of a similar character have happened
-to girls; and they have been obliged to call in
-surgeons to their assistance. There are numerous instances,
-where foreign bodies have been introduced
-into the vagina, and particularly into the urethra, and
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_163">163</span>
-could not be withdrawn. We shall mention some of
-them. Pamard has reported that of a girl, thirty-one
-years old, who used an ivory whistle, three inches and
-a half long, and five lines round in its centre. This
-she introduced, not into the vagina, but into the urethra.
-One day, it entered so far, that she could not remove
-it. After many efforts, it was withdrawn, with polypus
-forceps. Another girl, seventeen years old, was less
-fortunate. She was in the habit of introducing a large
-piece of wood into the urethra. This instrument having
-entered very deeply, fell into the bladder. Faure
-was called, and was obliged to cut for it, to extract it.
-Rigal was obliged to do the same, to relieve a young
-girl, twenty years old, who used a wooden needle-case
-in masturbating. Needles and pins have often escaped
-into these passages. Morgagni asserts that it is by
-no means unfrequent in Italy for the lascivious girls
-to introduce into the urethra the golden pins worn in
-their hair, and that they sometimes fall into the bladder.
-This they conceal for a long time; but they are
-finally obliged, through pain, to confess their fault.
-Moinichien mentions a Venetian girl, whom Molinetti
-relieved of a golden needle, which had slipped from
-the hand into this organ. In 1751, Lachese, (according
-to Morand’s report,) was called to a girl twenty
-years old, who had introduced into the urethra a toothpick,
-which she had lost; and after two months, it was
-extracted. A happy circumstance favored Lamotte
-in a similar case. An old maid had introduced into
-the bladder a very large pin. Having sounded several
-times very patiently and attentively, Lamotte finally
-felt the pin distinctly. He sounded for the fourth
-time, when, by accident, it became engaged in the
-sound. Wishing to withdraw it, and finding some
-resistance, he introduced his finger into the vagina,
-and ascertained whence it proceeded. By skilful manipulation,
-he now succeeded in withdrawing it.
-These symptoms usually happen only in those who
-are imprudent, and who introduce into the urethra an
-instrument designed for an adjacent passage. The
-vagina is so short and large, that foreign bodies seldom
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_164">164</span>
-remain in it. For such a thing to take place,
-certain conditions are requisite, which are not very
-common. This, however, is possible; and many cases
-of it are recorded. The following is mentioned by
-Dupuytren. A female consulted him for some derangement
-in the vulvo-uterine passage. On examination,
-a foreign body was felt, the nature of which
-could not at first be determined. The patient refused
-to give any information on the subject: by examining,
-however, it was found that the body presented a large
-opening or deep cavity. The tumefied walls of the
-vagina covering the edges of the kind of vessel, prevented
-its disengagement. After much effort, however,
-the body was removed; and it proved to be a
-pomatum-pot, which had been introduced by its base.
-(<i>Additions &agrave; la Med. Operat., de Sabatier</i>; vol. iv.,
-p. 96.)
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_165">165</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="xx-large" id="PART_SECOND">PART SECOND.</h2>
-
-<h2 id="RULES_OF_PRESERVATION_AND_TREATMENT">RULES OF PRESERVATION AND TREATMENT
-RELATIVE TO VENEREAL EXCESSES.</h2>
-
-<p>There are two indications, which embrace every
-thing relating to venereal excesses. The first is, to
-prevent the bad effects; the second, to remedy them.
-To <i>preserve</i>, to <i>recruit</i>, is what these excesses require.
-Hence, some of the remedial measures must be hygienic,
-and others therapeutic. To these, we shall devote
-two chapters of this second part.</p>
-
-<h2 id="PART_II_CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I.<br />
-
-<small>PRESERVATIVE MEANS RELATIVE TO VENEREAL EXCESSES.</small></h2>
-
-<p>The preservative rules which relate to venereal excesses
-present fundamental differences, as to the success
-and facility of their application, according as
-reference is made to the act of masturbation or coition.
-Let us point out these differences.</p>
-
-<p>Coition is an act, the mode and purport of which,
-considered in a scientific point of view, are legitimate;
-and which, consequently, is lawful, so long as the
-constitution and health are unimpaired. Hence, it
-should not be prohibited, except when abused&mdash;that is,
-when indulged in too often, or under circumstances
-which render it injurious. Except in these cases, it
-may be permitted, or even advised. When it is forbidden,
-the advice is generally understood, as it is
-commonly addressed to adults, children having neither
-the power nor the opportunity to indulge in coition.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_166">166</span>
-This advice may be easily followed, as the individual
-who indulges in coition to excess, may find it absolutely
-impossible to indulge: in fact, means to satisfy
-his taste can only be found by the concurrence of another.
-Hence, it is only necessary to shun this concurrence,
-to render this kind of excess impossible.
-To address one’s self to the reason of an adult&mdash;or,
-rather, of a young man&mdash;and to create for him, if he
-cannot create for himself, obstacles to sexual relations,
-these are the only two preservative indications which
-abuses of coition require. We have discharged the
-first, or have stated the mode of fulfilling it, by mentioning
-the bad consequences attending these abuses,
-and by making known the circumstances which render
-the act of venery injurious to those addicted to it.
-Hence, we shall not return to the subject. The second
-indication can find no place in a book, and consequently
-will not detain us. Our remedies, then, as to
-preservation, will apply exclusively to onanism. In a
-subsequent page, when we are treating of the restorative
-remedies, the distinction here laid down between
-this habit and coition will disappear; and we can then
-treat of all venereal excesses conjointly.</p>
-
-<p>Although coition, if confined within certain limits,
-and under certain circumstances, may not be forbidden,
-this is not the case with masturbation. This latter
-indulgence has nothing legitimate in it; and nothing
-respectable&mdash;nothing which can palliate the veto of
-the physician. We are aware that onanism is not always
-necessarily followed by any inconvenience or
-danger; but, practically, this distinction disappears.
-But onanism, without regard to the mode, its frequence,
-or the individuals or circumstances under which it occurs,
-may always be considered an abuse, and, consequently,
-be earnestly proscribed.</p>
-
-<p>This view of the subject rests on two facts: one is
-fundamental, and applies to all individuals, without
-distinction of age, sex, or constitution; the other relates
-only to those who are addicted to onanism, before
-they are perfectly formed and constituted. The
-first of these motives is founded on this, that when
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_167">167</span>
-this practice is not actually bad, it may constantly be
-suspected of becoming so. When onanism once commences,
-it is difficult to say how far it will extend.
-The taste for it, and the facility of indulging in it at
-night, and often in the day, cause this habit to be in a
-measure indulged in without limits. It becomes so
-soon imperious, and the despotism it exercises is so
-absolute, that we ought always to attempt its prevention.
-It should be regarded as a scourge, and be treated
-as such, without waiting for the bad effects which
-may result from it. This course is still more necessary,
-when children, young patients, and individuals
-who have not attained their growth, are interested.
-When maturity arrives, the evil is possible; before it
-happens, it is probable, and often certain. Farther:
-our remarks on precocious enjoyments prevent our recurring
-to the subject.</p>
-
-<p>Before speaking of the preservative means, a question
-presents itself. How can it be told when these
-means may be used? or, in other words, what are the
-signs which indicate that an individual is an onanist,
-or may become so? The suspicion may extend very far:
-in fact, every age is exposed to it, as onanism is possible
-from early life to old age: it, however, belongs
-to the age before puberty. A great many young girls
-and boys masturbate: hence, this maybe suspected of
-every one. This habit is less frequent, but it is far
-from being rare. The precautions to prevent onanism,
-and constant vigilance, should then be exercised constantly
-towards children and young people&mdash;in fact,
-towards all who are not of mature age. This rule is
-an important one; and cannot be neglected, without
-exposing one to danger and to deep regrets.</p>
-
-<p>It would be desirable to ascertain the existence of
-onanism before its effects appear; but this is seldom
-the case. There is in children a kind of instinct which
-leads them to conceal this manœuvre, although they
-have not learned that it is an illicit act. The art with
-which they elude vigilance is often inconceivable.
-Watch where the child goes. Have an eye to him
-who seeks solitude&mdash;who remains a long time alone,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_168">168</span>
-and who cannot give a good account of himself. Be
-watchful about the periods of lying down and of rising.
-At this time, the onanist may be detected in the act.
-His hands are never out of bed, and his face is often
-hidden under the bed-clothes. Soon after lying down,
-he appears sound asleep: this circumstance, which
-always causes distrust in the experienced man, is one
-of those which contribute the most to inspire the parents
-with a feeling of security. The affectation of
-sleep in the young person may serve to detect him.
-When approached, he is frequently found red, and
-covered with sweat, although neither the temperature
-of the chamber, the weight of bed-clothes, nor any
-other cause, can explain this state: at the same time,
-the respiration is more hurried, the pulse is fuller,
-harder, and more frequent; the veins are larger, and
-the heat is greater, than usual; in fine, there is that
-kind of fever, of general turgescence, which usually
-attends the act of venery.</p>
-
-<p>When the young person is disturbed suddenly, his
-hands, if he has not had time to remove them, will be
-found on or near the genital organs. The penis, also,
-may be found in a state of erection; or you may even
-find marks of recent pollution, which might be known
-by the peculiar odor arising from the semen, and which
-comes from the soiled fingers. Have an eye to those
-young persons, whose hands, when in bed, or during
-sleep, are in the position described: they are onanists,
-or will become so. The same is true in those who
-frequently have erections of the penis. This erection,
-and this attitude, are certainly not positive signs of
-onanism; but they are the probable, or precursory signs
-of it: they should not, then, be neglected. The stains
-of semen, on the bed-clothes or dress, may also increase
-suspicion. When the patients are very young, they
-are not very evident, the fluid which they emit not
-having the characters of real semen: the traces which
-it leaves, however, are too remarkable, not to cause suspicion
-as to their origin. In those who have attained
-the age of puberty, there would be nothing equivocal:
-the only question then would be, that they might be
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_169">169</span>
-produced by involuntary pollution. On this topic, we
-would remark, that this pollution seldom occurs before
-the age of fifteen or sixteen years, and is seldom frequent
-before twenty. When involuntary discharges
-of semen are frequent in young persons, you may be
-assured that they are the indirect results of onanism:
-hence, there is reason to regard stains of semen as
-positive proofs of onanism, when the patients have not
-attained the age of puberty; and as more probable signs
-of this habit, when older, if these stains be frequent.</p>
-
-<p>A loss of color, or an earthy tint of the countenance&mdash;a
-violet appearance of the eyelids&mdash;a languid expression
-of face&mdash;an air of fatigue and <i>nonchalance</i>,
-when the patient rises from bed&mdash;a difficulty in getting
-up&mdash;are all signs which may lead to the discovery of
-this pernicious habit. Here we might trace the physical
-state produced by onanism, if this had not already
-been done. Unfortunately, it is consumption which
-sounds the alarm; and this disease must be advanced,
-too, before the parents seek the cause. Sometimes,
-the true cause is overlooked, and all remedies are directed
-to an imaginary one. We will admit, however,
-that it is not always easy to refer the wasting caused
-by masturbation to its real origin. A young man, although
-not addicted to onanism, may lose his strength,
-grow thin, and present, both morally and physically,
-the characters belonging to this habit: this effect is
-often produced by intestinal worms, by dentition, puberty,
-by a too rapid growth of the body, &amp;c.; and
-likewise by some chronic diseases of the stomach, intestines,
-liver, lungs, heart, &amp;c. Hence, we should
-not be too quick to attribute to masturbation a state
-which may be produced by other causes. The practitioner
-who would pronounce too precipitately that a
-patient indulged in onanism, would commit an error
-which might be serious in more than one respect.</p>
-
-<p>When a young patient presents signs of consumption,
-there is cause to suspect that onanism is the cause
-of it; and modes may be used to ascertain whether
-this be the case. Sometimes, the patient is watched,
-as has already been stated. Sometimes, we attempt
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_170">170</span>
-to discover if any other cause has produced consumption;
-and when this cause is not found, the existence
-of onanism is supposed. The patient, for instance,
-presents all the symptoms of exhaustion, and these increase.
-We inquire if this state may not result from
-a want of nourishment, or from improper food&mdash;from
-hard work&mdash;from long watching&mdash;from melancholy,
-&amp;c.; if it may not be caused by a disease about which
-the patient is silent, or by one of those maladies which
-produce effects similar to those of masturbation. Now,
-if the gradual sinkings of the patient cannot be explained
-by any of these causes; if he is weak, pale,
-thin, &amp;c.; if, notwithstanding abundant and nutritious
-diet, a moderate degree of labor, the absence of all
-chagrin, &amp;c.; if he presents no sign of disease&mdash;or,
-rather, if the first symptoms of diseases which he
-would present are not manifested until after the appearance
-of those of consumption; farther, if these
-diseases are too slight to have caused this state; if
-they cannot explain the numerous and varied symptoms
-observed, and particularly the countenance, the
-character of which is so significant, that it alone often
-reveals onanism: then we may consider, if not as certain,
-at least as very probable, that the patient is a victim
-to this habit, and we must act accordingly.</p>
-
-<p>But, of all the proofs, it is most important to obtain
-an avowal of the habit from the patient. First, it
-removes all doubt; then it renders the action of the
-physician more frank, and consequently more efficacious.
-He is no longer fearful of wounding his feelings&mdash;of
-compromising his character, by showing a
-wrongly founded suspicion; of awaking the attention
-of the young patient to a subject of which he was
-ignorant, or of teaching it to him. Advice, remonstrances,
-punishments, and all the moral remedies, are
-now easily applicable; and if therapeutic or coercive
-measures are called for, the patient can no longer deny
-their utility, and reject their use. Finally, an avowal
-places the physician, parents, instructors&mdash;in short, all
-who have authority over the patient&mdash;in a position to
-proceed directly to their aim, and thereby attain it.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_171">171</span></p>
-
-<p>An avowal never takes place spontaneously: to obtain
-it is difficult. With males, one need not be so
-particular; but we must be careful with females. On
-this topic, no positive advice can be given: much must
-be left to the <i>tact</i> of the practitioner. We will only
-add, that we have more than once simply given advice;
-and we could see, from the manner in which it was
-received, that our conjectures were right. The physician,
-however, should always attempt to acquire the
-confidence of the onanist, to place him at his ease.
-They have no frankness when a person is stern, or
-when a moral lecture is expected. The physician
-should confine himself to his profession. In his eye,
-onanism should be regarded as a cause of disease&mdash;as
-a cause similar to an excess of labor, bad regimen&mdash;in
-fact, like any influence which might prove injurious
-to the health. If he should moralize, he would probably
-be debarred from that confidence which would
-enable him to give advice, and prescribe the resources
-of the art.</p>
-
-<p>Masturbation is often overlooked, because it is thought
-that the hand is a necessary agent in producing it:
-this is far from being the case; as it may be indulged
-in, by both sexes, without the aid of the hands. When
-this is suspected, it is soon discovered, by the manners,
-face, and silence of the onanist: there is something
-unusual in the appearance of the patient, which is
-readily observed; and generally, also, the thighs are
-crossed, or, at least, are pressed closely together.</p>
-
-<p>To prevent the development of the habit, and, when
-it is developed, to arrest it, are the two indications
-prescribed by hygeia. These two indications may be
-embraced in one&mdash;that of <i>preventing</i> the occurrence
-of onanism. If, for instance, you have before you the
-case of two individuals, one of whom is not addicted
-to onanism, while the other may be, you should <i>prevent</i>
-one from continuing, and the other from commencing
-it. In the two cases, the means used have
-the same tendency; only when you wish to prevent
-the habit commenced, you have need of more efforts
-than in the first case, where it does not exist. These
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_172">172</span>
-means are, then, preventive&mdash;essentially preventive;
-for, whatever may be their mode of action, they all
-tend to prevent the act. Although the prevention of
-onanism, and the arrest of the habit, are apparently
-different, yet we shall state the mode of attaining this
-double result, to avoid repetitions.</p>
-
-<p>In masturbation, we must consider three things&mdash;the
-desire, the will, and the power. Onanism is not possible,
-where these three conditions do not exist: there
-is no wish without desire; and the latter is often completely
-mastered by the former, and both present no
-result, if there be no possibility of indulging. Hence,
-to prevent masturbation, and to arrest it, the desire,
-the wish, the power to indulge, must not exist. These
-are, as it has been seen, three distinct indications. It
-is sufficient to attain one of them. It is easily seen,
-that by appeasing the desire, the will is aided; and the
-obstacles opposed would be more efficacious, the less
-vivid the desire, and the weaker the will. It is, therefore,
-sufficiently understood, that the three indications
-we have mentioned, although very distinct, require
-each of them special means, the attainment of one of
-which renders that of the others useless, while they
-all can and may be pursued conjointly.</p>
-
-<h3 id="First_indication">&sect; 1. <small>FIRST INDICATION. TO PREVENT THE OCCURRENCE
-OF THE DESIRE TO MASTURBATE, TO PREVENT ITS RETURN,
-AND TO ABRIDGE ITS POWER.</small></h3>
-
-<p>The desire of masturbation is very distinct from
-venereal desires, which may be felt without experiencing
-the other. This desire is special: it is that of
-onanism, and no other. The influences, also&mdash;the result
-of which is more or less proximate, and which is
-to excite the genital sense&mdash;are only the <i>indirect</i> and
-<i>predisposing</i> causes of onanism. The direct and efficient
-causes are those which lead to the indulgence
-of it, and the preferring of it to coition. Consequently,
-two indications relate to the desire of masturbation:
-one consists in preventing the exaltation of the venereal
-sense, or in appeasing it; and the second, in preventing
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_173">173</span>
-or destroying the special causes of the desire
-of onanism. We proceed to study these two indications
-in succession.</p>
-
-<p>1. <i>Rules relative to the general or indirect causes
-of onanism.</i>&mdash;The genital sense, and, consequently,
-the venereal desires, may be felt too vividly and too
-early, in consequence of different circumstances, which
-may be divided into two groups. Some belong to the
-human body, and consist in certain innate acquired
-arrangements of the organization, in consequence of
-which the venereal sense presents more or less susceptibility.
-Others consist in different influences, as
-education, food, climate, kind of life, &amp;c.; which may
-act on the sensibility in general, and particularly on
-that of the genital system. We will begin with the
-rules connected with the former.</p>
-
-<p><i>Of the innate or acquired causes of venereal excitement,
-and of the rules of preservation connected
-with them.</i>&mdash;Some individuals seem, as it were, marked
-by their organization, to become victims of venereal
-excesses. In them, the genital sense is excited, and
-exercises great power, long before the usual period of
-its manifestation. In others, on the contrary, this
-sense is not excited until late: in fact, it is so slight,
-that even this excitement may be doubted. In the
-present state of the science, these differences can by
-no means be accounted for. In many cases, however
-the great development of certain organs, the increase
-of their vitality or their diseased state exercise considerable
-influence on the strength and precocity of the
-venereal sense.</p>
-
-<p>Gall, and the phrenologists of his school, place amativeness
-in the cerebellum. They consider this organ
-as the legislator of the sexual parts, the seat of physical
-love; and assert that the differences in the mass
-and vitality of this portion of the brain, correspond
-exactly to the differences of the intensity of the genital
-desires. We will proceed to mention the different
-facts on which these physiologists formed their opinion.</p>
-
-<p>Comparative anatomy furnishes them with no argument
-worthy of mention: in fine, facts contradictory
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_174">174</span>
-to Gall’s opinion may be derived from numerous classes
-of animals who have been deprived of their cerebellum,
-and yet have exercised the act of reproduction.
-This opinion applies only to man, and the mammalia
-resembling him. The relation between the development
-of the cerebellum and that of the genital organs,
-has furnished a more plausible reason: it has been
-adduced as an argument, that, in the encephalon, the
-fibres of the cerebellum are the last to appear distinctly;
-and this organ is not perfect, till from the age of eighteen
-to twenty-six years. A remark of Sœmmering, also,
-has been adduced, to show that the cerebellum, at the
-period of puberty, is to the cerebrum as one to five,
-while in infancy it is only as one to seven.</p>
-
-<p>We have already seen that the genital sense is more
-powerful in males than in females. But it is said
-positively, that the cerebellum is commonly smaller
-in females than in males.</p>
-
-<p>Phrenologists have also sought to establish a reciprocity
-of action between the genital organs and the
-cerebellum, by means of the results of castration, and
-also the influence which the development of the cerebellum
-may have on the testicles. Castration, (say
-they,) while it opposes the development of the sense
-of venery, prevents the cerebellum from gaining the
-size it would otherwise have attained. Observe, too,
-how much broader the neck in the bull is, than in the
-ox. They have also advanced, that if castration occurs
-only at a period when the cerebellum acquires its
-development, the genital sense may survive this operation;
-that, in some cases, it may reduce this organ
-to a state approximating atrophy; that the removal of
-one testicle from an animal, whatever may be its species,
-may produce atrophy, or some alteration in the
-lobe of the cerebellum, on the side opposite to the testicle
-removed. They have added, that the alteration
-of the cerebellum had caused a wasting of the testicles;
-and that, in the cases where one of the lobes
-only was disorganized, the testicle of the opposite
-side was alone affected. According to Gall and his
-disciples, the size of the cerebellum is discerned externally
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_175">175</span>
-by the size and breadth of the nucha.
-They remark, that this part of the skull is generally
-more convex in males than in females&mdash;in entire animals,
-than in those who have been castrated&mdash;in early
-life, and in those individuals who are distinguished
-for their salacity, more than in those who are not susceptible
-to the pleasures of love. Larrey pointed out
-to Gall a soldier, whose antipathy to females amounted
-to mania: the sight of a female caused in him violent
-convulsions, and almost fury. Spurzheim saw a similar
-instance in England. Now, in both of these individuals,
-the cerebellum was but slightly developed.
-The portraits of Newton, Charles XII., and Kant,
-according to Gall, by the narrowness of the neck,
-show that the organ of which we were speaking was
-but slightly developed in these great men, who history
-states had but little relish for venereal pleasures. Dispositions
-diametrically opposite, on the contrary, co-exist
-with an enlarged volume of the brain. The
-following is related by Gall:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“A highly intellectual lady was affected from infancy
-with very passionate desires; and her careful education
-alone saved her from those excesses to which she
-was exposed by her violent temperament. When arrived
-at a more advanced age, she was left to herself.
-She attempted every mode to satisfy her burning passions;
-but enjoyment seemed only to irritate her. She
-was frequently almost in a state of mania. In despair,
-she left her house, quitted the city, and took refuge
-with her mother, in a desolate country, where the want
-of exciting objects, and the utmost severity, and the
-cares of gardening, prevented the evil. After a time,
-she returned again to a large city, was again threatened
-with relapse, and took refuge a second time with her
-mother. On returning, she came to see me at Paris,
-and complained to me in great despair. ‘On every
-side, I see images of luxury&mdash;in every place&mdash;at table,
-and even in my sleep, the demon pursues me. I shall
-either be mad, or die.’</p>
-
-<p>“I told her briefly the natural history of the instinct
-of propagation. I called her attention to the form of
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_176">176</span>
-her neck. Although her head was very large, yet the
-diameter of the nucha exceeded the distance from ear
-to ear. She formed an idea of the cause of her state.
-I advised her to visit her mother again; to vary her
-occupations, so as to diminish the activity of her cerebellum;
-to apply leeches to the nucha, to diminish the
-irritation of this organ; to avoid all stimulating meats
-and drinks, &amp;c. &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p>“I have seen at Paris,” says the same author, “a
-boy, five years old, who seemed sixteen, in respect to
-his corporeal strength. His genital organs were perfectly
-developed; his beard was strong; his voice was
-rough and hoarse: in short, he presented all the signs
-of virility.”</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Gall was struck, also, with the development of
-the cerebellum in a boy ten years old, who had been
-detained in a house of correction at Leipzick, for having
-violated a young girl. He had also seen at Paris
-a young mulatto, less than three years old, who was
-remarkable in the same respect. He made advances,
-not only to young girls, but to women, and urged them
-to consent to his desires. His sexual organs, with
-the exception of long-continued erections, exhibited
-nothing remarkable. As he was surrounded by girls
-who indulged him, he died of consumption before he
-was five years old. His cerebellum was unusually
-developed; the rest of the head was of the common
-size. Gall has related other instances of the kind.</p>
-
-<p>A case published by Dr. Chauffard, of Avignon, deserves
-to be stated here. This physician accompanied
-the prefect in 1823, in his tour to the departments, to
-examine those young men who wished to be discharged
-from military service. A stout farmer, with coarse
-beard and hair, and disagreeable odor, was undressed,
-being, as it was said, affected with a disease which
-he dared not name. It was at the close of December;
-the season was cold, and the room very chilly. No
-sooner was he undressed, than the penis began to
-swell. He was confused&mdash;he blushed&mdash;he turned his
-back to the assistants. He could not avoid the priapism;
-nor, finally, an emission of semen, which took
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_177">177</span>
-place without a sensible diminution in the size of this
-organ. This man was ignorant and stupid, but he
-answered questions correctly. He said he was always
-tormented by continual erections, often followed by
-seminal emissions. He even admitted that he was
-accustomed to solicit them. His neck was short;
-broad, and thick; the posterior portion of the occipital
-bone presented a very marked slope: finally, the cerebellar
-portion of the cranium was very prominent, and
-much developed. This man was reformed. (<i>Jour.
-univ. des Sc. Med.</i>, December, 1828.) We have also
-observed a very remarkable development of the posterior
-part of the skull, in a boy eight years old, who
-was addicted to masturbation for several years, and
-whose penis was almost constantly in a state of erection.
-This prominence so elongated the antero posterior
-diameter of the cranium, that the mother found it
-difficult to fit caps to his head.</p>
-
-<p>One of Gall’s most distinguished pupils, Dr. Voisin,
-has tested phrenology, in a visit recently made to the
-convict galley, at Toulon. Renaud, the Director,
-informed of the scientific purpose of the visit of this
-physician, allowed him to examine the cerebral organs
-of 350 thieves, forgers, or homicides; among whom
-he had designedly distributed 22 other convicts, condemned
-for rape, requesting M. Voisin to discover
-them from this number, by examining the posterior
-part of the head. This gentleman picked out 22, 13
-of whom only were condemned for violence. Thus,
-then, he had selected nine who were not guilty of this
-crime; and, on the contrary, had allowed to escape
-him nine who had been committed. Now, the nine
-wrongly selected were libertines, whom the Director
-admitted required to be constantly watched; and the
-nine, on the contrary, whom he had not detected, were
-guilty by accident, or when intoxicated: with them,
-libertinism was only accidental, and not organic.</p>
-
-<p>A few experimental proofs have been invoked, in
-support of Gall’s opinions of the cerebellum. We
-will cite a remark made by Serres, as to those bulls
-killed by striking them on the back of the neck. “The
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_178">178</span>
-penis, in those where the cerebellum was injured, oscillated
-very evidently during the experiment.” The
-same gentleman observed a very marked erection in a
-young horse, who was killed by plunging a knife into
-the cerebellum. Segalas has produced the same effect
-in Guinea pigs, by pushing a stylet into this organ.</p>
-
-<p>The principal proofs, however, have been drawn
-from the action of the diseased cerebellum on the genital
-apparatus. Thus, the erection of the penis in
-those who die by hanging, has been attributed, by Gall,
-to the affection of the cerebellum in this kind of death.
-Cruvelhier has contested this explanation. He thinks
-it may be explained by the stasis of the venous blood.
-“Respiration,” says he, “is retarded, in consequence
-of the medulla oblongata; and hence results a semi-asphyxic
-state, favorable to erection. In hanging,
-there may be an affection of the cervical part of the
-medulla; and priapism has been observed more than
-once in lesions of this part.” Phrenologists have also
-shown, that this symptom often follows the application
-of a blister or seton to the neck. Another fact, to show
-the connection of the cerebellum with the genital apparatus,
-is that of a soldier, whose generative powers
-had disappeared, after the fleshy scalp of the occiput
-had been removed by the blow of a sabre. We doubt
-whether similar cases to this, which was observed by
-Larry, have often occurred; although Dr. Bischoff has
-advanced, that wounds of the back of the head, and
-blows on this part, have often been followed by inflammation
-of the genitals.</p>
-
-<p>Peculiar excitement of these organs has more than
-once attended a disease of the cerebellum. We have
-already mentioned this fact; and the cases stated were
-selected as those where the affection of the cerebellum
-might be considered as produced by venereal excesses.
-In those now to be mentioned, the genital excitement
-is, or seems to be, the consequence of this affection.</p>
-
-<p>Erection of the penis, with or without pollutions,
-has several times been noticed as a symptom of apoplexy
-of the cerebellum. This phenomenon may have
-been observed in some cases of this affection which
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_179">179</span>
-we have cited. Serres was the first one to call attention
-to this phenomenon, in his Memoir on Apoplexy
-of the Cerebellum, inserted in the Journal of Experimental
-Physiology; the principal facts of which have
-been adduced in his work on the comparative anatomy
-of the brain. One fact is, that of a man, forty-six years
-old, who died with violent apoplexy of the cerebellum,
-during which satyriasis and ejaculation appeared, with
-swelling of all the genital organs. Similar cases,
-which it is unnecessary to state here, might be added.
-One of them was observed by Falret. “The priapism
-was presented to my observation with a very remarkable
-circumstance. The patient had been affected
-with apoplexy, and presented a complete paralysis of
-the left side of the body. Different nervous symptoms
-indicated that there was also great irritation of the
-encephalon or its membranes. This man, although
-half frantic, made amorous proposals to the female
-who attended him, and presented a semi-erection of
-the penis: this part, instead of being straight, presented
-a concavity, which looked towards the side not paralyzed.
-I regret that I could not examine the cadaver
-of this individual. The affection of the genital organs,
-in apoplexies of the cerebellum, might probably have
-been noticed in many cases, if it had been sought after.”
-It has not been noted, in any of the cases analyzed by
-Andral. Cruvelhier, also, has never noticed priapism,
-in a case of apoplexy of the cerebellum which he has
-seen; but he adds, that he would not dare to say that
-it has never existed&mdash;at least, temporarily. In fact, it
-may easily escape observation.</p>
-
-<p>Hydrocephalic patients often show a great passion
-for venereal indulgences. Gall, in noticing this remark,
-observes, that of all the parts of the encephalon,
-this is the least changed in these individuals. Chauffard
-has seen a hydrocephalic patient, fourteen to fifteen
-years old, with an enormous head, who was addicted
-to masturbation, and spoke of the pleasures he
-derived from it.</p>
-
-<p>An acute or chronic irritation of the cerebellum, or
-of its envelopes, may cause venereal symptoms more
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_180">180</span>
-than the alterations just mentioned. In a cadaver,
-brought from the hospital Bicetre to the amphitheatre,
-where the penis and testes were considerably swelled,
-the whole of the cerebellum was inflamed. One of
-the most interesting facts of this kind was reported by
-Chauffard. It was that of a man, fifty-three years old,
-of pleasant manners and mild character, who, in falling,
-struck his head against the bed-post. The inferior
-occipital region became inflamed; and subsequently,
-the habits of the patient were much changed:
-he became affected with satyriasis, and was so salacious,
-that he persecuted his wife and daughter, and
-all the females around him. This man, hitherto pious
-and modest, gradually became affected with the most
-violent erotic delirium, and finally committed the most
-indecent acts. During the next three months, this
-state increased; but, at the same time, his strength
-and intelligence failed. Finally, one day, after a violent
-fit of anger, occasioned by the refusal of his wife
-to listen to him, he became convulsed. The pain left
-the back part of the head, and affected the top of it.
-The left side of the body now began to be paralyzed;
-and the satyriasis was replaced by religious delirium,
-with constant mumbling of prayers. The patient died
-eight days afterward. According to Chauffard, at first,
-there was an affection of the cerebellum. When the
-state of the patient was changed, the organ of veneration
-was affected: this organ corresponds to the central
-posterior and superior part of the frontal bone,
-where the patient finally felt severe pain.</p>
-
-<p>Was not the cerebellum, also, affected, in the following
-case reported by Sainte Marie:&mdash;“A merchant
-of Lyons, an educated and honorable man, seemed to
-be cured of an inveterate venereal affection, for which
-he had undergone a course of treatment with mercury.
-He, however, complained of restlessness, heat in the
-throat, <i>pains in the occiput and nucha</i>, and frequent
-erections. In 1812, after domestic troubles, he became
-affected with furious delirium. This state lasted three
-days, and terminated in priapism; during which, the
-patient had fourteen emissions in a few hours. This
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_181">181</span>
-singular crisis resulted in a perfect calm: extreme
-debility, however, remained, which soon yielded to
-tonics and analeptics. Two years and a half afterward,
-this disease reappeared, under the influence of these
-same causes, and with similar symptoms. The termination
-was the same. There was a slight return
-of it after two years; but, this time, the patient escaped
-with slight erections, without much loss of semen.”</p>
-
-<p>Facts of a similar character have induced several
-authors to attribute satyriasis and nymphomania exclusively
-to an innate or accidental state of the cerebellum.
-“The material condition of satyriasis,” says
-Voisin, “resides in the encephalon; and in all cases,
-the deranged manifestation of it depends on the nature
-and preponderating power of the cerebellum, or on
-those moral and intellectual causes which have favored
-the development of this organ&mdash;or, rather, on the external
-circumstances which at the moment of disease
-have brought it violently into action.” On the other
-hand, the localization of physical love in the cerebellum
-has been violently contested by excellent observers,
-particularly by Flourens and Bouillaud, who consider
-as the special function of this organ its presidence
-over locomotion. Bouillaud, particularly, has attempted
-to establish, by analyzing the observations of Gall and
-Serres, that they are not so conclusive as these authors
-asserted, and that they may be interpreted differently.
-Chauffard thinks that Gall has gone too far, and that
-his remark, that physical love and erections should
-not be attributed to the presence of the semen and the
-irritation which it causes, should be qualified by using
-the term <i>exclusively</i>. We also think, that, thus altered,
-Gall’s remark would be more just. The cerebellum
-has certainly a powerful action on salacity; but we
-shall see that each part of the genital apparatus exercises
-one equally great; and that, consequently, the
-organic principle of the state of rutting, and of venereal
-excesses, cannot be sought for solely in the encephalon.</p>
-
-<p>In consequence of Gall’s opinions, many authors,
-among whom we will mention Chauffard, Voisin, and
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_182">182</span>
-Londe, have thought it necessary, in order to subdue
-too great a degree of amativeness, to make applications
-directly to the cerebellum. Some attempts have
-seemed to justify this view of the subject. Sainte
-Marie says, that a physician of Lyons has cured inveterate
-nocturnal pollutions, by applying ice to the occiput
-and nucha before going to bed. A man, thirty
-years old, had three or four seminal emissions every
-night, which Lallemand had tried in vain to cure,
-by cauterizing the ejaculatory canals. Gensoult applied
-leeches and ice to the nucha: the pollutions were
-arrested, as if by magic. Serres, who reports this case,
-adds, that, since the publication of his memoir on cerebellar
-apoplexy, he has seen two cases of apoplexy,
-where erections appeared during the paroxysms. Both
-were cured by applying leeches and emollient cataplasms
-to the nucha. Might not narcotics be applied,
-endermically, near the cerebellum, to subdue the onanistic
-satyriasis? Might not belladonna, opium, &amp;c.,
-introduced in this manner, be used with advantage?
-Might not, also, the hair of the head be kept short,
-especially behind, and rest on a pillow of hair, instead
-of feathers? Setons and blisters, also, should be applied
-to the neck, in onanists, only with the utmost
-care; and they should be removed as soon as they are
-considered indispensable. Besides the irritation caused
-near the cerebellum, the influence of the cantharides
-is to be guarded against.</p>
-
-<p>We have already stated, that there is a reciprocity
-of action between different organs: if there be one
-which exercises a marked influence on the other, the
-latter will in turn affect the former. This may be
-proved by the cerebellum, which sometimes becomes
-diseased after abuses of the genital organs, and sometimes
-communicates to these organs the over-excitement
-which is accidentally seated in it: the spinal
-marrow, also, confirms the fact.</p>
-
-<p>Willis, who, before Gall, had sought to localize in
-the nervous centres the faculty of reproduction, had
-designated the spinal marrow as the organ of this faculty.
-Numerous observations, and many experiments,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_183">183</span>
-have lately given some credit to this opinion. Segalas,
-who produced erections of the penis in Guinea pigs,
-by introducing a stylet into the cerebellum, caused
-ejaculations by pushing this instrument into the spinal
-column, near the lumbar region. Serres repeated this
-last experiment, and the result was similar: he therefore
-concluded that the lower part of the spinal marrow
-acts on the secretory and excreting seminal apparatus,
-as the cerebellum acts on the genital sense. We
-shall see, also, that this opinion is too positive, as the
-lesions of the medulla exert a marked action on erection
-of the penis and the venereal sense, besides the
-influence on the ejaculation attributed to it by Serres.</p>
-
-<p>A case, reported by Lenhossek, seems to establish,
-that compression and atrophy of the spinal marrow
-may oppose the development of the genital organs.
-This patient was twenty-four years old: he was thin,
-wasted, and his height was that of an individual twelve
-years of age. Neither his face nor genital system presented
-the characters of puberty. This individual died
-suddenly; and it was found, that in consequence of a
-malformation of the first and second cervical vertebr&aelig;,
-the diameter of the occipital foramen was contracted
-one half. The medulla oblongata had been compressed
-in this part, and its development was impeded.
-Might not the singular disease, observed by Larrey in
-Egypt, and afterward in Paris, be referred to an affection
-of the spinal marrow? Here the testicles gradually
-wasted; the patient lost the power of feeling venereal
-sensations, and also that of erections; the lower
-extremities shrunk away, and tottered; the face was
-discolored; the digestive powers and intellectual faculties
-were deranged. Does not this coincidence, of
-a considerable weakening of the lower extremities and
-the wasting of the testicles, indicate that this latter
-has been the consequence of an affection of the spinal
-marrow?</p>
-
-<p>Dupuytren long since established the fact, that priapism
-was caused by a lesion of this organ. Numerous
-instances of this are found in Olivier’s work on the
-spinal marrow: they prove, that every part of the medulla,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_184">184</span>
-but particularly the cervical portion, when injured,
-may cause an erection of the penis. Potain,
-Renauldin, and Hedelhofer, have stated similar facts.
-This last author saw a man who fell upon his sacrum,
-and instantly had an emission. Professor Fages was
-in the habit of mentioning the following case in his
-lectures:&mdash;“An aid-de-camp of General Dumourier
-was affected with complete paralysis of the lower extremities,
-in consequence of a fall from his horse.
-This paralysis was attended with a great degree of
-priapism, which encumbered him very much, and
-caused retentions of urine, which were treated by the
-most active refrigerants. Going through Montpelier,
-on his way to Balaruc, he rested several days at the
-military hospital, where it became expedient to sound
-him. In order to do this, it was necessary to uncover
-the whole body, to expose it for some time to the cold
-air, and to apply to it cold water; and, even then, the
-sound had to be used promptly, otherwise erections
-would soon have supervened, merely by touching the
-penis, and by the presence of the sound in the urethra.
-The baths of Balaruc almost cured the paralysis; and
-as motion returned to the lower extremities, the priapism
-disappeared.”</p>
-
-<p>Do not these facts show that the spinal marrow has
-a marked influence on the genital organs. We have
-already mentioned the opinion of Sainte Marie, who
-regards involuntary pollutions as sometimes the cause
-and sometimes the result of affections of the spinal
-marrow. May not an original or accidental state of
-this organ be, in some subjects, the indirect cause of
-venereal excesses? Remark the influence of a recumbent
-position, in producing voluptuous dreams and
-emissions of semen. Does not this singular effect depend
-on the heat of the spinal marrow caused by this
-position? This is possible, particularly if you consider
-the advantages derived in involuntary pollution,
-priapism, and satyriasis, from douches of cold water
-along the vertebral column, particularly on the lumbar
-and sacral regions, and also from the application of
-ice to these parts. Sainte Marie has sometimes arrested
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_185">185</span>
-the spasm of the genital organs by frictions on
-the sacrum with bladders full of ice. We think, then,
-there are cases where these remedies may be used successfully
-to combat the habit of masturbation. Narcotic
-frictions and endermic applications may be made
-along the vertebral column, as we have said, when
-speaking of the cerebellum. In vigorous patients,
-leeches and cups may be applied to the loins. We
-will not allude here to the remedy recommended by
-many old authors, of a sheet of lead to the kidneys,
-for this cannot produce the refrigerant effect expected
-from it.</p>
-
-<p>The organic conditions of venereal desire are confined
-neither to the cerebellum nor spinal marrow:
-they may exist, also, in all parts of the genital system,
-as we shall demonstrate.</p>
-
-<p>A considerable part of this system is formed of a
-tissue termed the <i>erectile</i>, on account of its power of
-swelling, hardening, and becoming erected. It constitutes
-the whole of the cavernous bodies&mdash;the glans,
-which is the loose extremity of these bodies&mdash;the
-spongy part of the urethra&mdash;the clitoris&mdash;and a considerable
-portion of the vulva and vagina. The part
-taken by this tissue in the work of generation, would
-indicate that it is affected in amatory desires, and that
-its state must exercise some influence upon them;
-which is demonstrated by the facts we shall mention.</p>
-
-<p>There is no vice in the human species without its
-representative in some class of animals. Thus, the
-inclination to theft, to destroy, &amp;c., are found in some
-species existing to a great degree. So, too, with luxuriousness.
-There is a class of apes&mdash;the dog-faced&mdash;which
-represent it. It is impossible to form an idea
-of the lasciviousness of these animals, which is manifested
-at sight not only of a female of their own class,
-but at that of a woman: they show by their looks,
-gesture, and voice, that they are excited. They are
-extremely jealous at sight of a man. They indulge in
-coition to great excess; and if this be impossible, they
-abuse themselves. How does their organization differ
-from that of other animals?&mdash;in the cerebellum?&mdash;in
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_186">186</span>
-the spinal marrow? No: but according to Desmoulins,
-by the enormous mass of erectile tissue which they
-have. This tissue abounds not only around the sexual
-organs, but is found in the haunches and pubis. In
-the face, it is not confined as in us to the lips, but it
-covers the face, and there presents a brilliancy of color
-which exceeds that of the vulva and glans in our species.
-It should be remembered that the kunocephali
-do not exhibit this lasciviousness until puberty, when
-this tissue is developed, and assumes its brilliant
-colors.</p>
-
-<p>Here, then, are animals, in whom the erectile tissue
-evidently performs the part attributed by phrenologists
-exclusively to the cerebellum. Why may not the
-same thing exist in our species? Are not the penis
-and clitoris, generally speaking, much larger in those
-who have a marked propensity for the pleasures of
-love? Is not their erection the most constant sign of
-the activity of the venereal sense? Is not the erectile
-tissue developed at puberty, at the same time with this
-sense, and does it not collapse in old age? Finally,
-does not the genital sense exist at its highest degree
-in the glans&mdash;the clitoris&mdash;that is, in the organs formed
-entirely of this tissue?</p>
-
-<p>There is, then, reason to seek the principle of masturbation
-in this tissue, and to this remedies should
-be applied. This is done in a vigorous and healthy
-patient by blood-letting, and by applying leeches or
-cups around the sexual parts. Lotions and cold applications
-to these parts, and cold hip-baths, act in the
-same manner; and as they do not contribute to the
-exhaustion, they are employed more frequently. Sainte
-Marie recommends that the genital organs of individuals
-affected with spermatorrhœa should be covered
-with bladders of pounded ice, which should be removed
-as often as it melts. This remedy seems more efficacious
-and convenient than the application of wet
-sponges or linens to the parts. It might also be used
-in those onanists who will consent to it. The same
-indication is fulfilled by forbidding children to be
-washed in warm water, and by causing them to use
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_187">187</span>
-hard cushions to sit on; and likewise, by keeping the
-pelvis lightly covered, and the clothes large enough to
-allow the air to circulate freely around the genital
-organs. The cold injections, in girls, may also be
-somewhat useful. There is also another remedy which
-is applicable to parts formed of erectile tissue, and
-which we shall mention&mdash;viz., their removal.</p>
-
-<p>Some nations are accustomed to practise upon their
-female children a kind of circumcision, which consists
-in cutting off several parts of the vulva. This custom is
-very ancient, and exists particularly in Egypt, Ethiopia,
-around the Persian Gulf, and in several parts of
-central Africa. What portions of the vulva are cut
-off? Many authors think that these are the nympb&aelig;,
-clitoris, and even the hymen. In fact, Niebuhr has
-given a colored plate of the sexual organs of an Egyptian
-girl, eighteen years old, drawn by the painter
-Baurenfiend, the original of which is in the library at
-Gottingen, in which the parts just named seem to
-have been extirpated. Sonnini, who has examined two
-young Egyptian girls, one of whom had been circumcised
-for two years, while the operation was performed
-on the other in his presence, states, contrary to Niebuhr’s
-opinion, that this operation has reference to the
-interior of the vulva, and is confined to the excision
-of a thick, flabby, and fleshy excrescence, covered with
-skin, which in several African races rises above the
-commissure of the external labia; the length of this
-was only six lines, in the two girls observed by him,
-but it may be four inches long, at the age of twenty-five
-years. As the opinion of Niebuhr agrees with that of
-all authors who have lived in these countries, the facts
-observed by Sonnini are exceptions, rather than the
-rule. Hence, it appears, that in many nations it is
-the custom to remove from the females a considerable
-portion of the erectile tissue, which is found around
-their sexual organs.</p>
-
-<p>What is the origin of this singular custom? Is it
-to remove in infancy, from the vulva of the girls, certain
-prominences which, at a later period, might prove
-inconvenient? Has this custom been established with
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_188">188</span>
-a view to cleanliness? May it not be, to take away
-the power of self-abuse? Whatever may be the reason
-of its existence, its effect is to deaden the venereal
-sense, by removing a portion of the surfaces in which
-it is situated. This seems positively established, by
-the testimony of Niebuhr, and many others.</p>
-
-<p>If this be so, may not the removal of the internal
-labia and of the preputial portion of the clitoris&mdash;especially
-if these parts are large&mdash;be attempted, in order
-to avoid a more extreme thing, which we shall mention
-directly. Might not this removal blunt, if it did
-not deaden, the propensity to solitary enjoyments, and
-render the other remedies employed more efficient?
-Although we have but little confidence in this operation,
-yet, when we consider that a superficial cauterization
-of the nymph&aelig; and clitoris has cured nymphomania,
-as will be stated hereafter, we can conceive
-that the excision of the internal labia may in some
-ca&laquo;es present a chance of success. Farther: this operation
-is not very painful&mdash;is easily performed&mdash;and
-cannot, even under the least favorable circumstances,
-be attended with any inconvenience, except that of
-being useless. It certainly would not be practised
-generally if it caused severe pains, or was followed
-by bad consequences. In Africa, it is performed by
-the females of Said, who use a razor. And it should
-be remembered, too, that it is not children who submit
-to this operation; but girls eight or ten years old,
-as may be seen in the travels of Niebuhr and Sonnini.</p>
-
-<p>The exquisite sensibility of the clitoris, and the size
-it commonly presents in lascivious females&mdash;that
-which it acquires in those who masturbate, or who
-are affected with nymphomania&mdash;have led to the opinion,
-that voluptuous desires are situated exclusively in
-this organ, and that its removal will extinguish them.
-Levret was, we believe, the first who conceived the
-idea of curing nymphomania by this operation. Dubois
-performed it on a young girl, who was so addicted
-to onanism, that she was almost in the last stages of
-marasmus. Aware of the danger of her situation, and
-yet too weak, or too much under the control of voluptuousness,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_189">189</span>
-she could not resist. In vain were her
-hands and limbs tied: she rubbed herself against the
-bed, and thus procured excessive discharges. Her
-parents applied to Dubois, who proposed amputation
-of the clitoris. This was assented to. The organ
-was removed by one stroke of the knife: the hemorrhage
-was arrested by the actual cautery, and the girl
-recovered her health and strength. Richerand, who
-has reported this case, considers the operation performed
-on this young girl as the most efficient remedy
-in such a case. If the idea of cauterizing the vessels
-is disagreeable to the patients, the vessels of the clitoris
-might be tied, as are those of the penis after amputation.
-(<i>Nosog. Chirurg.</i>, second edition, 1808; vol.
-iv., p. 326.)</p>
-
-<p>The following, which is similar to the preceding,
-but more remarkable in some respects, was published
-in the Journal of Surgery, by Graefe:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“The subject of this case was born in 1807, and
-grew very well, till the age of fourteen months, when
-she became ill: for eight days, she was affected alternately
-with constipation, diarrhœa, and vomiting. She
-remained sick till she was two years old, and did not
-walk till she was four. She, however, never learned
-to talk, and exhibited symptoms of idiocy. This idiocy
-resisted the most varied treatment, progressively
-increased, and the patient was finally reduced to a
-state below the brute. She swallowed her feces, and
-passed hour after hour in a corner, her tongue lolling
-from her mouth.</p>
-
-<p>“The most experienced physicians considered her
-case as hopeless. A physician at Berlin undertook to
-cure her. She was now fourteen years old. He remarked
-first in her a strong inclination to onanism:
-she indulged in this practice night and day. In this,
-there was a curative indication, which the physician
-embraced immediately. It seemed evident to him that
-masturbation prevented the development of the intellectual
-faculties. Hence, she was prevented from sitting
-down; and the head was cauterized, to obtain
-revulsion by the pain. The wound from this operation
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_190">190</span>
-did not suppurate till after six weeks. Cold effusions
-were applied to the wound, and a solution of
-antimony was injected into it. These remedies were
-followed by a slight degree of amendment. Douches
-and emetics were then used, but in vain. Finally,
-when the patient was fifteen years old, her physician
-resolved to extirpate the clitoris. The operation was
-performed June 20, 1822, by Professor Graefe, of Berlin.
-The wound soon cicatrized; and the good effects
-of the process exceeded all expectations. The disposition
-to onanism was removed; the mind became expanded;
-and the education of the patient commenced.
-In three years, she could talk, read, write, and even
-play a few tunes on the piano&mdash;to be sure, rather imperfectly;
-but still she might be regarded as being in
-the way of recovering from her long and cruel disease.”</p>
-
-<p>The details of this case are not sufficient to establish
-whether idiocy was the cause or effect of onanism.
-We may conclude, however, from the result, that it
-was at least in great part the consequence of this habit.
-It, however, was necessary to put a stop to the onanism
-before the idiocy disappeared. Farther, this case
-shows the extent of the restorative power of nature,
-when it is no longer impeded by masturbation. It
-also shows, by the good effects arising from removing
-the clitoris, that it would be wrong to think, as several
-authors, and particularly Voisin, have asserted, that
-nymphomania always depended on an affection of the
-cerebellum. Powerful and the most energetic revulsives
-had been applied to this latter organ, but unsuccessfully.
-It was not the first time the remedies had
-been used. Villeneuve long since recommended the
-application of caustics to the legs, and of cups around
-the genital organs, with extensive scarifications, to
-appease venereal desires.</p>
-
-<p>The two following facts were communicated by
-Biett. The first is that of a lady, thirty-five years old,
-who became affected with nymphomania, after long
-absence from her husband. After many unsuccessful
-efforts to cure this disease, extirpation of the clitoris
-was decided upon. The operation was not easy, and
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_191">191</span>
-there was considerable hemorrhage, requiring the application
-of ligatures. In a few weeks, the patient
-recovered.</p>
-
-<p>The success of this operation induced Biett to advise
-a similar one in the following case:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Mademoiselle C***, ten years old, of strong constitution
-and good muscular developments, had been
-addicted to onanism since she was two years old. She
-was taught it by her nurse, who remarked that she
-was quieted, when crying, by titillating the clitoris, in
-which she was soon imitated by the patient. The
-habit finally caused great moral and physical degeneration.
-At first, the cause of her wasting away was
-unknown; but when it was discovered, the parents
-tried every mode to break her of it. Their vigilance
-was in vain&mdash;she still continued it. Her mind remained
-unaffected, but not so with her physical constitution.
-Mechanical means were now employed: the
-apparatus of Lafont was applied, but without success;
-and there was danger of her becoming idiotic. Her
-parents, after long hesitation, decided to have the
-clitoris removed. The operation was performed June
-26, 1831, with perfect success. The patient became
-restored, and her voluptuous feelings disappeared.”</p>
-
-<p>Many have scruples in regard to this operation.
-They ask whether it is right to nip the enjoyments of
-love in the bud, &amp;c. These considerations seem to
-me only to impose circumspection in respect to the
-operation, and to show that the operation never should
-be employed until all other remedies have been tried.
-But when life is to be saved, or the mind is to be preserved,
-then we ought not to hesitate. We then do,
-as in amputating a limb&mdash;we sacrifice a part for the
-whole. Nor is it demonstrated, that the venereal
-sense is for ever extinguished, by removing the clitoris.
-This organ is not the exclusive seat of venereal
-sensations, as we have already seen, and shall see
-again. Hence, it may be feared, for this reason, that
-the operation may not be successful. In fact, only the
-prominent part of the clitoris is cut off: a large portion
-of the cavernous bodies remains. If the operation is
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_192">192</span>
-performed before puberty, perhaps by developing their
-tissue, this feeling may extend at this period of life:
-but, even then, if these chances of reparation did not
-exist&mdash;if it were certain to destroy all sexual desires&mdash;still
-this operation ought to be performed; as, without
-these feelings of love, a female may become a good
-mother, and a devoted wife.</p>
-
-<p>Our remarks on the cerebellum, spinal marrow, and
-erectile tissue, may apply to all parts of the genital
-apparatus; as each part may be a direct cause of venereal
-excitement, and consequently an indirect cause
-of venereal excesses. This is certainly true of the
-mucous membrane, which lines the genito-urinary passages.
-Every one knows that acute inflammation of
-the interior of the urethra often causes painful erections,
-and which may attend a deformity of the penis;
-and hence the term <i>chordee</i> is applied to these blenorrhœas.
-We have seen, when speaking of diurnal pollution,
-that chronic inflammations of this canal may
-be followed by losses of semen. The presence of a
-stone in the bladder usually causes an itching and
-tickling at the end of the penis, which has sometimes
-been the beginning of bad habits. If, after excesses
-of the table, coition is indulged in to excess, it is because
-the abuse of wine and liquors stimulates the
-mucous membranes, and particularly those of which
-we are speaking&mdash;excites their action, and new desires
-arise. Is it not on the special character possessed by
-cantharides, of inflaming the urinary passages, that
-the violent satyriasis caused by this remedy depends?</p>
-
-<p>The phenomena we have mentioned are seen much
-more frequently in females than in males, as the mucous
-membrane of the genital organs is much more
-extensive and more exposed to the action of external
-agents in the former. We have known several cases
-of nymphomania to be caused by herpetic affections,
-which were seated within the vulva. Biett knew a
-case of it in a female, sixty years old, affected with
-prurigo of this part. Trousseau has known similar
-cases. Hence, the irritations of the vulva, attended
-with itching, have been considered by many authors
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_193">193</span>
-among the causes of onanism. Eczema, when it has
-extended to the vulvo-vaginal mucous membrane, has
-been known to induce this habit violently in females.
-Ascarides, which have escaped from the anus, have
-often caused violent itching, and afterward a venereal
-excitement, which was followed by the same result.
-Beck has known these worms to produce nymphomania
-in a female seventy years old. Bitter injections
-into the vagina were followed by the evacuation of a
-great number of these animals, and by the cessation
-of the symptoms.</p>
-
-<p>The remarks of many authors on the salacity of
-individuals afflicted with herpetic eruptions must apply
-particularly to those who are afflicted with pruriginous
-diseases of the skin around or near the genital organs.
-The excitement then extends to these organs, and
-awakes in them the sense of venery; a similar result
-may attend irritation of the inner surface of the rectum.
-Wichmann thinks, and a case published by St.
-Marie confirms the opinion, that simply the presence
-of ascarides in this instance may cause discharges of
-semen. Hemorrhoidal irritation has sometimes produced
-them. Thus Wichmann relates the case of an
-individual, in whom hemorrhoids caused an obstinate
-diarrhœa during the day, and frequent pollutions at
-night. Nymphomania has been produced by drastic
-enemata, and particularly by those made of gratiola.</p>
-
-<p>It is not uncommon to see symptoms of inflammation
-appear at the same time or successively in different
-mucous membranes. The membrane lining the
-genital organs is not more exempt from this, than
-others. The heat which patients feel in the genital
-parts, the redness and swelling which are there developed,
-are generally the only symptoms which then become
-known to the physician. But there is another,
-the excitement of the venereal sense, which often escapes
-him; either because the patients are too young
-to explain it, or because a natural feeling prompts
-them to conceal it. Hence this symptom is frequently
-unnoticed, except in rare cases, where it exists to a great
-degree, and presents characters analogous to those of
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_194">194</span>
-satyriasis and nymphomania. Dr. Desportes was we
-believe the first one to point out a certain relation between
-venereal excitement and different catarrhal affections
-among which he has particularly mentioned
-the aphthous inflammation of the pharynx termed by
-Guersent <i>angina pultacea</i>. M. Desportes has known
-attacks of at least eight cases of this angina to be
-preceded by a vivid excitement of the reproductive
-system, an excitement which is sometimes manifested
-by an irritation, which although not exactly the venereal
-appetite, is analogous to it, and causes in the patient
-an evident feeling of distrust, inquietude, and
-chagrin. As this phenomenon has presented itself as
-a precursory symptom in at least one half of the cases
-of angina pultacea observed by him, he regards it as
-an index of the imminent invasion of this disease.
-He also thinks and with reason, that this phenomenon
-may, in young patients, become a cause of masturbation,
-and even in some cases, may pervert momentarily
-the ideas and sentiments, so as to impel individuals
-to the commission of acts reputed criminal or
-culpable. This opinion of Desportes is supported by
-eight facts. The most remarkable is that of a lady
-seventy years old, in whom the angina pultacea, was
-preceded for about a month with vivid and frequent
-venereal desires: they became so irresistible, that
-notwithstanding her religious opinions, she forgot herself
-so far as to relieve her ardor by onanism.</p>
-
-<p>Desportes has attempted to explain this singular
-feeling, by the connexion of the nerves of the neck
-with certain parts of the encephalon, the commencement
-of the spinal marrow. He might, we think,
-have explained this more naturally, by observing that
-the genital excitement, instead of appearing simultaneously
-with the affection of the pharynx, disappeared
-simply from the appearance of the latter. Thus,
-in one of these patients, a man of fifty years old,
-whose habits were chaste, and who was suddenly affected
-with unusual venereal desires and priapism,
-these symptoms ceased, when after twenty days, an
-angina appeared; which was followed by an eczema
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_195">195</span>
-which affected the hairy scalp, and the parts behind
-the ears. In another of the cases reported by Desportes,
-the genital excitement which appeared during
-convalescence from pleuro pneumonia, was suddenly
-replaced by an inflammatory irritation of the digestive
-passages, and particularly of the inner membrane of
-the mouth. Is it not evident that the irritation was
-transmitted in these cases from one membrane to another.
-If, however, Desportes has erred in the manner
-in which the genital excitement is produced, he
-deserves credit for pointing out a symptom which
-merits the attention of practitioners.</p>
-
-<p>The irritation of the internal integuments of the
-genital parts, is not only, as this physician has thought,
-a precursory sign of that of the pharynx. It may
-show itself during the continuance of an inflammation
-of any other portion of the mucous membranes,
-or it may even follow this inflammation. Dr. Mirambeau
-has communicated to me two cases which confirm
-this fact. The first is that of a boy who was affected
-after a chill, with a very obstinate gastroenteritis.
-This disease was nearly terminated, when the
-mucous surface of the penis became the seat of a very
-severe irritation, which was soon attended with satyriasis.
-Things came to such a pass that his hands
-were obliged to be tied to keep him from those manipulations
-which he had never indulged in before. The
-subject of the second case was a girl nine years old,
-who presented the same circumstances as in the preceding
-case. She also was obliged to be tied. This
-fit continued in these two cases, from ten to twelve
-days.</p>
-
-<p>Hence irritation of the mucous membrane which
-lines the genito urinary passages may alone cause
-venereal excitement, and consequently onanism, independent
-of any affection of the nervous centres.
-This fact is highly essential on account of the important
-indications which may be deduced from it.
-Aware of the possibility of its existence, the physician
-will be more attentive to discover this irritation;
-he will find it more frequently and may in a degree
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_196">196</span>
-prevent a fatal habit: he will also carefully remove
-every cause of irritation from the mucous integument
-of the genital parts and discuss as promptly as
-possible the inflammations which may be developed
-there. The mode of doing this is by attending to the
-following rules. To keep the sexual parts perfectly
-clean by repeated ablutions: to forbid all excesses of
-the table, and the use of such food and drinks as tend
-to render the urine more irritating, and the genito urinary
-mucous surface more irritable; hence to discard
-the use of wine, liquors, coffee, tea, spices, beer, particularly
-that made strong with hops: to allay irritations
-of the interior of the rectum, around the anus or
-those affecting the integuments around the genital organs.
-When children complain of itching around
-the anus, you must ascertain whether this be not
-caused by ascarides which is easily done by inspecting
-the parts and the feces: no means should be spared
-to get rid of these worms when they exist:<a id="FNanchor_1" href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">1</a> and finally
-the most efficient remedies should be used to cure
-the itching of the genitals as soon as this affection
-commences. Ozanam communicated to the academy
-of medicine August 12, 1828, a very acute case of
-nymphomania which had resisted antispasmodics,
-narcotics, cold baths, &amp;c.; and which was finally cured
-by applying to the internal labia and clitoris a solution
-of four grains of nitrate of silver in an ounce of
-water. There was a marked inflammation of the
-parts to which this was applied. (<i>Rev. Med.</i>, <i>Sept.
-1828.</i>) In 1833, we employed successfully another
-remedy, for a lady thirty-four years old and subject to
-nervous affections. She experienced a feeling of heat
-and irritation in the vulva and vagina which caused
-her excessive trouble. Solutions and injections of an
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_197">197</span>
-infusion of the wild cherry-tree, produced no relief.
-The introduction into the vagina of a pledget of lint
-moistened with a solution of the extract of belladonna,
-(one grain to the ounce,) had a better effect. Different
-symptoms indicated the absorption of this drug
-into the system and the irritation disappeared. But it
-returned a few days after, and we then advised the
-application of ice within the vagina which relieved
-her, and finally brought about a permanent cure.</p>
-
-<p>The irritation of the uterus in this lady might have
-had more or less influence in producing these distressing
-symptoms. Venereal desires, and nymphomania
-may in fact also depend upon the state of this organ.
-The excitement preceding and attending the period of
-menstruation, renders females much more lascivious.
-This phenomenon is much more marked in the small
-number of animals who menstruate: it always coexists
-in them with the period of rutting. This remarkable
-fact, which has long been known, of asses and
-monkeys, has lately been ascertained to exist in the
-roussettes by Carnot and Lesson, and in the genette
-by Cuvier. Farther inflammations and diseases of
-the uterus have often been observed in those affected
-with nymphomania. Helwiel relates the history of a
-lady, who, after being for a long time indifferent to
-conjugal pleasures, became extremely salacious. She
-died some time afterward, and on opening the dead
-body, fibrous tumours were found in the tissue of the
-uterus, and hydaleds in the ovaries. Calmeil found
-in a monomaniac, who was most furiously addicted to
-onanism, and who had a perfect hymen, that the os
-tinc&aelig; and a part of the neck of the uterus were of a
-violet colour, and were softened and ulcerated. This
-author observes that generally, when deranged females
-imagine themselves pregnant, or that they have
-been violated, are finally known to think of their genital
-organs, there is commonly some lesion of the uterus.
-(<i>Dict. des Sc. Med.</i>, <i>art. Alienes</i>.) In the
-cases which have been mentioned, the affection of the
-uterus was not so much the cause as the result of the
-excesses which had been committed, but this cannot
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_198">198</span>
-be said of those cases where Lisfranc has seen cauterization
-of the neck of the uterus to be followed in
-the genital organs with a kind of erethism which is
-attended with void desires. Is not this an experimental
-proof, that an irritation of the uterus may produce
-an exaltation of the venereal sense.</p>
-
-<p>This excitement from congenital or accidental dispositions,
-may affect the ovaries; to prove this we
-have only to consider that their development exactly
-follows that of the venereal sense: that at forty-five
-years they begin to diminish in size, and finally they
-disappear: their removal or destruction too is always
-attended with the extinction of venereal desires. The
-respective size of the veins and arteries of the ovaries
-has been mentioned by some authors as a cause of
-salacity: the amorous ardor of animals, say they, is
-much greater, when the veins of the ovaries are
-smaller and fewer than the arteries. Haller found
-that the last-named vessels were very much developed
-in a female whose temperament was extremely
-amorous. Different alterations in the ovaries have
-been found in those affected with nymphomania.
-Bosset, Blancard, Vesalius, Riolan, Mangel, Dimmerbroede,
-Riviere, Lieutaud &amp;c. have observed cases of
-this. De Blegnay states that one of the girls confined
-at the Salpetri&egrave;re, and who had been affected
-several times with furor uterinus, was once seized so
-violently that it was necessary to tie her. This unfortunate
-girl perished by suffocation, while struggling
-to extricate herself. On opening the dead body
-the left ovary and Fallopian tube were found much
-diseased.</p>
-
-<p>The removal of the ovaries has been performed
-successfully to appease excessive uterine ardor; a
-swineherd, irritated by the conduct of his daughter,
-extirpated these organs and thus extinguished her
-passions. The ovaries however have been extirpated
-several times on account of disease. The operation
-has been performed on several women and with success
-by Dr. Sacchi of Italy, and Dr. D. L. Rogers of
-New York. The usual effects in those who are fortunate
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_199">199</span>
-enough to survive, are a wasting of the mamm&aelig;
-and a perfect indifference to the act of venery
-(<i>Bulletin therapeutique</i>, vol. iv., p. 313.)</p>
-
-<p>We need not make many remarks on the effects of
-castration in the male to show the influence of the
-testes on the development and vivacity of lascivious
-desires. We know that it has been asserted that
-these desires may remain after the loss of these organs.
-In support of this opinion have been quoted
-Galen, Juvenal, Brantome and many other authors,
-particularly Franck, who states that four eunuchs in
-a city had so many intrigues with females, that the
-police were obliged to interfere. (<i>Dict. des Sc. Med.</i>,
-vol. iv. p. 269.) But these facts only prove that eunuchs
-may indulge in pretended coition and that they
-preserve some sparks of the fire which is generally
-seated in the testicles. Most authors have attributed
-the action of these organs in the sense of venery, to
-the fluid secreted by them, to the semen. They say
-that this fluid awakes this sense either by the qualities
-it assumes, when accumulating in the testicles or
-seminal vesicles, or because it is carried by absorption
-to all parts of the body. This opinion is certainly
-much too positive: but in the present state of science,
-can we, as do many authors, assert that it has no
-foundation? The qualities of the semen may certainly
-vary much, as may be proved by the presence
-or absence of the spermatic animalcul&aelig;. It is entertained
-for instance, that these animalcul&aelig; do not appear
-before puberty, and that they are not to be found
-in old age, that they disappear during sickness, and
-that in many animals, in most birds for instance, they
-occur only during the season of mating (<i>Dumas</i>,
-<i>Dict. class. d’hist. nat.</i>, <i>art. generation</i>.) The venereal
-sense becomes imperious, when the individual
-secretes real semen, and this sense may be felt in old
-men, after semen is no longer formed. The fulness
-of the seminal vesicles cannot be absolutely necessary
-for venereal desires, because these organs do not
-exist in birds, in many cold-blooded animals and in
-some of the mammalia. Are these persons in whom
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_200">200</span>
-the testicles, instead of descending into the burs&aelig; as
-usual about the seventh mouth of fetal life, remain
-in the abdomen, are these persons, who are termed
-cryptorchides more addicted than others to sensual
-pleasures? This has been asserted by many authors,
-and particularly by Monro and Hunter. They certainly
-are not less so. Poliniere has related a case of
-a person of this character 17 years old whom he saw
-at Brest in 1812, and who indulged most immoderately
-in venereal pleasures contrary to the advice of his
-physicians. Death soon put an end to his career.</p>
-
-<p>The sensuality attributed to the cryptorchides has
-been explained by the greater degree of heat experienced
-in the testicles, when they remain in the abdomen.
-Be this as it may, the excitement of these
-organs probably exalts the sense of venery. When
-the state of excitement is very marked, they swell
-and become more sensible: these symptoms however
-are much more marked in animals during the
-period of rutting, than in our species. Accidental
-irritations of the testicles have sometimes also caused
-an unusual excitement of the sense of venery. Moreau
-attended for a long time a man advanced in
-age, who consulted him particularly for pollutions attended
-with amatory dreams. These symptoms
-which were very distressing constantly occurred,
-whenever the fibrous membrane of the testicles was
-affected with chronic rheumatism.</p>
-
-<p>From our remarks, we can conceive that extirpation
-of the testicles would be a powerful remedy, in
-fact the most efficient of all remedies, to quell lascivious
-desires, and to put an end to venereal excesses.
-Hence individuals have been known to sacrifice these
-organs, and thus to rid them&laquo;elves of a salacity which
-rendered them unhappy. Baldassar relates the history
-of a man on whom he tried every remedy, and
-finally found nothing better than fasting and prayers.
-“Not recovering under these remedies,” says this
-author, “he wished the operation of castration to be
-performed, but I thought it inexpedient. The patient
-however pressed me very earnestly, and sought to win
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_201">201</span>
-over to his views by presents those who opposed his
-wishes. He even promised me an ambling poney of
-remarkable beauty, if I would consent to perform it.”
-Reduced to despair some individuals have even castrated
-themselves. Origen, it is well known, mutilated
-himself, in order to extinguish the warmth of his
-temperament. This operation has been performed by
-surgeons and with happy results. A surgeon of Bernstadt
-was less fortunate: he removed the testes of a
-man 73 years old, in consequence of the unusual desires
-he experienced. The operation was not attended
-with the expected result. (Sprengel, <i>Hist. de la
-med.</i>, <i>vol. ix</i>.) Hence this remedy is not infallible.
-We will add that it is far from being without danger,
-particularly in those individuals who are already exhausted
-by excesses. Farther, the operation is not
-confined, as in amputation of the clitoris, to the extinction
-of the venereal sense: it takes away the
-procreating power, and causes that moral and physical
-deterioration which is seen in eunuchs, even when
-they have lost their testicles after puberty. These
-therefore are reasons why this operation should not
-be performed; an operation which is disapproved of
-by most authors. We will except however Simon,
-who advises as a last resource in those affected with
-onanism to press upon or tie the vas deferens or the
-spermatic artery; for it is better, said he, that the
-patient should live a eunuch, than that he should inevitably
-perish. (<i>Hygiene de la jeunesse</i>, p. 174.)
-Some practical conclusions may be drawn from the
-facts we have mentioned. Thus in some patients,
-cold lotions or applications of ice to the scrotum, and
-of leeches around it, may be used with advantage.
-Young patients also should have these parts clothed
-lightly.</p>
-
-<p>Diseases affecting various parts by their action on
-the organs mentioned, that is on the cerebellum, spinal
-marrow and the genital system, may cause a kind
-of a state of rutting and thus become the occasion of
-venereal excesses. For instance an unusual venereal
-excitement is sometimes a forerunner of an attack of
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_202">202</span>
-gout, which may be explained by considering that the
-invasion of the local symptoms of this disease, is
-usually preceded by the irritation of several mucous
-membranes. Does not the salacity which all authors
-have mentioned as being peculiar to phthisical persons
-depend on the part which the genito-urinary
-membrane takes in the general excitement of the mucous
-membranes which is so common in the tuberculous
-affection of the lungs? Pathological anatomy
-has thrown no light on the subject. Of forty patients
-affected with phthisis, where the prostate gland, seminal
-vesicles, and vasa deferentia were carefully examined
-by Louis, three only presented an alteration
-of these parts; this consisted in the deposition of a
-quantity of tuberculous matter in the prostate gland:
-in one of them this matter was found in the seminal
-vesicles and vasa deferentia. (<i>Recherches anatopath.
-sur la phthisie</i>, 1825, p. 132.) Louis says nothing
-in regard to the amatory passions of these individuals.</p>
-
-<p>The affection of the genito-urinary mucous membrane,
-accounts also for the venereal sensations which
-many authors have mentioned as a symptom of the
-elephantiasis of the Greeks, otherwise termed lepra
-tubercularis. The frequency of this symptom was so
-remarkable, that the ancients confounded elephantiasis
-with satyriasis. Sonnini saw at Cana, in the island
-of Candia, a great many individuals of both sexes,
-affected with this kind of leprosy. They were confined
-according to custom, in barracks without the walls
-of the city, and there they indulged in the most unbridled
-licentiousness. Even the old men were very lascivious.
-He gives an instance of a leper who, on the
-night of his death, indulged his desires. Niebuhr
-speaks of another leper who carried away by his ardor,
-imparted his disease to a woman of Bagdad, who was
-admitted with him into the lazaretto of that city.
-Vidal and Joannis assert that they have seen this <i>libido</i>
-in those Greek sailors affected with elephantiasis.
-After these proofs, it required some boldness to deny
-the possibility of this symptom, which to us seems
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_203">203</span>
-easily explained. Consider the nature of elephantiasis:
-while it affects the skin, it extends to the mucous
-membranes, where we find tubercles, ulcerations, softenings,
-&amp;c. Why should the membrane, lining the
-genito-urinary passages, be exempt from these alterations?
-Is it not then probable that this membrane was
-diseased in some way or other, in those individuals
-affected with libido? We can easily imagine, too,
-that as these alterations cannot be constant in lepra
-tubercularis, the symptom of which we are speaking
-must often be deficient, which explains why different
-authors who have observed cases of elephantiasis,
-particularly Alibert, Rayer and Cazenave, have not
-met with it. An affection of the genital organs may
-produce results completely opposite to libido: it may
-arrest the development of the genital organs when it
-appears before puberty. The individuals then present
-the marked characters of eunuchs, which has been
-observed by Adams, (Obs. on morbid poisons.) and
-probably Pallas, who asserts that the Tartans affected
-with elephantiasis, are averse to the pleasures of love.
-Farther, in lepra tubercularis, the sexual parts are
-often, and according to Alibert, most generally affected;
-this would necessarily extinguish all venereal desires.
-This probably was the case in the patient mentioned
-by Cazenave, in whom the testicles, glands and prepuce
-were found converted into a lardaceous tissue; and
-where, too, the corpora cavernosa were destitute of
-blood, and presented an evident hypertrophy of their
-septa.</p>
-
-<p>It often happens that the genital sense is exalted,
-because it is the only one, or nearly so, which continues.
-This is frequently seen in idiots, and in those
-affected with dementia. The imbeciles, if left to themselves,
-“says Esquirol,” sometimes at the period of
-puberty become affected with onanism, nymphomania,
-or hysteria. Idiots also often indulge in the most unrestrained
-masturbation. This can readily be imagined:
-these individuals are in a measure isolated by the debility
-or weakness of their senses and intelligence.
-As they receive no external impressions, those which
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_204">204</span>
-are inherent, exercise unlimited power. The internal
-senses are then much more regarded, because they
-speak alone. That which is in others only a desire,
-becomes in idiots a want: hence there are many who
-seem to live, merely to eat, drink, and indulge in licentiousness.
-When speaking of the effects of onanism
-on the mental faculties, we have shown that the
-venereal sense becomes heightened, as these other faculties
-are weakened. This fact may be remarked,
-whatever may have been the cause of derangement:
-for many individuals become affected with onanistic
-satyriasis, because they are imbecile or idiotic. Finally,
-idiocy may be the effect and cause of onanism.
-Sometimes the disease appears first, sometimes the
-habit&mdash;but as soon as they exist they strive continually
-to increase, and we are unable to say which of the two
-exercises the stronger influence on the other.</p>
-
-<p>Our remarks on idiocy are equally applicable to cretinism,
-which is a variety of this affection. The cretins,
-though small, goitrous, hideous and imbecile, are
-extremely salacious, and this feeling is allayed by intercourse
-between them, or by onanism. A remarkable
-fact which has been observed twice, once in a cretin
-and once in an idiot, may throw some light on the organic
-causes of the inverse progress followed by the
-external and internal senses in this kind of patients:
-it is the <i>hypertrophy of the ganglionnary nervous system</i>.
-One of these cases is recorded by M. Schiffner.
-He found, on the cadaver of a cretin, that the ganglions
-of the great sympathetic nerve, situated along the vertebral
-column, were unusually large. The sympathetic
-nerve of the left side, on a level with the 6th vertebra
-presented a ganglion the size of a hen’s egg. Before
-this case of Schiffner, in 1819, Cayre also, in a thesis
-on idiotism, had mentioned the excessive development
-of the ganglionnary system, in one born an idiot. The
-cervical ganglions were three times their usual size;
-those of the thorax were larger than in the healthy
-state, and this was the case also with the semilunar
-ganglions.</p>
-
-<p>We have seen that individuals appear much more
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_205">205</span>
-lascivious, as they become more stupid and insensible;
-venereal sensuality often developes itself under very
-different circumstances. It may be only an episode,
-and sometimes it is an effect of the general susceptibility.
-A person is lascivious, because he is alive to
-vivid impressions; because the genital organs, like the
-rest of the economy, are easily excited, and their excitement
-is vividly felt. This disposition occurs often
-in hypochondriac and hysterical people; that is, in individuals
-who are so susceptible as to be habitually
-sick. They are easily excited, and have nocturnal
-pollutions from the slightest cause. The genital organs,
-also like the others, may become affected by an
-irritation which is seated at a greater or less distance
-from them; for instance, in the stomach, lungs, skin,
-&amp;c. Those persons who are affected with cutaneous
-diseases, which cause itching, are generally extremely
-lascivious. Symptoms similar to priapism and satyriasis,
-appear in numerous diseases. Nervous or flatulent
-colics have often been known to produce a similar effect.
-A woman observed in 1833, at Hotel Dieu, in
-the ward of Bouillaud, and whose case is reported by
-Donne, (Revue Med., June, 1833,) presented a phenomena,
-which, notwithstanding its strangeness, is explained
-by what we have said. She was thirty years
-old, of a strong constitution, and hysterical. After an
-attack of acute rheumatism affecting the wrist, her
-hand became exquisitely sensible, and the slightest
-friction upon it, procured for the patient all the sensations
-arising from coition. This aberration of the sensibility
-disappeared with the last traces of the rheumatic
-inflammation, and the part regained its natural
-state. A highly respectable man, Dr. Mirambeau,
-communicated to us the case of a child who procured
-similar sensations by pulling his umbilicus. His health
-suffered so much in consequence of this singular habit,
-that coercive measures were employed to check it.
-We must remark, however, that notwithstanding the
-sensations mentioned, this patient presented no erection
-nor any other phenomena in the genital organs, similar
-to those of the act of venery.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_206">206</span></p>
-
-<p><i>Of the things which may produce venereal excitement,
-and of the modes of preservation which are
-connected with them.</i> These things are all those
-which are capable of increasing the sensibility in general
-and particularly that of the organs of venery:
-the means are, the influences which may be used to
-act in a contrary direction.</p>
-
-<p>The venereal desire may develope itself at all seasons.
-The most favorable to its appearance, however,
-is spring. This fact was well known to the
-ancients: but it did not rest on a scientific foundation
-till recently. The confirmation of this fact is owing
-to the statistical labors of Villerm&eacute; in France and of
-Quetelet and Smits in Belgium.</p>
-
-<p>Villerm&eacute; proposed to establish, from the register of
-births, the periods of the year when conceptions occur
-most frequently. He arranged the months in the following
-order. May, June, April, July, February,
-March, December, January, August, November, September,
-October.</p>
-
-<p>Hence the three months when there are the most
-conceptions are April May and June, and those in
-which there are the fewest are September, October,
-and November. Hence it is in spring, at that period
-of the year when vegetation sprouts forth and when
-the trees are covered with foliage, when most animals
-seek their mates, that pregnancy is most common:
-while in autumn, that season in which vegetable life
-is as it were extinguished, is also the period when the
-human race labors least at reproduction. The results
-obtained by Quetelet and Smits, conform entirely
-with the above. It now remains to know whether
-the difference between spring and autumn arises from
-there being less procreative exertion or whether conception
-or impregnation at that time are more easy.</p>
-
-<p>To resolve this question Villerm&eacute; consulted the
-criminal calendar to ascertain at what period of the
-year there were the most attempts at rape: and he
-found that it was the same as that when the most
-conceptions occur, that is in the spring. The same
-result was obtained by Quetelet and Smits. May
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_207">207</span>
-not these crimes be more common in the spring because
-then men have more opportunity of being
-guilty, as at that time females may be found alone and
-loosely clothed, in the woods and distant places? But
-these same circumstances exist in the months of August
-and September, and yet the respective number of
-these crimes diminishes in these two months. Nor
-can this greater number of pregnancies be attributed
-to the fact that more marriages are contracted at one
-period of the year than at another, for the <i>maximum</i>
-and <i>minimum</i> of births can be referred in every
-country and at all times, with but few limitations to
-the same periods, while the <i>maximum</i> and <i>minimum</i>
-of marriages in different countries present great and
-numerous differences. We may then consider it as
-determined that man is subject to a certain extent to
-a kind of <i>periodical heat</i>, which returns every year
-in the spring.</p>
-
-<p>It is not the heat of weather which produces this
-phenomenon, for if this were the case, it would appear
-in July and August rather than in April and
-May: but it is <i>the return of early warmth</i>. Perhaps
-this phenomenon also arises from influences now unknown,
-which would contribute in early spring to the
-vernal resurrection of organized beings. The slight
-variations in the period of heat in men, in different
-climates, confirms what has been said as to the action
-of spring. Villerm&eacute; having compared the different
-parts of France, of Europe and even of the two hemispheres,
-found that the maximum of conceptions is,
-like this season, more precocious in warm than in cold
-climates. There is then a period of the year when
-man is more disposed to indulge in these excesses and
-when his desires should be more carefully controlled.
-We have already seen that Wichmann regards the
-spring as a cause why diurnal pollutions are more
-active and frequent; the same may be said of nymphomania.
-In a female whose history has already
-been given and who was affected with this disease,
-the period of the greatest degree of salacity extended
-from the beginning to the end of this season.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_208">208</span></p>
-
-<p>There is another observation which at first seems
-only of a moderate degree of importance but which
-may present practical deductions of great interest.
-Villerm&eacute; has found that the maximum and minimum
-of conceptions are much less marked in the cities than
-in the country, and still less so in the large cities.
-This fact confirms our remarks on the influence of
-seasons, for it shows that this influence is less, the
-more individuals are exposed to it. It shows too how
-far the salacity of men may be influenced by his mode
-of living. This remark has long been made in regard
-to animals: the period of rutting ceases to be marked
-periodically when they pass from a savage to a domestic
-state. We have now to learn in what manner
-a retired life acts on the venereal sense. Another observation
-of M. Villerm&eacute; seems to us to throw light
-on this topic.</p>
-
-<p>The law of <i>maximum</i> and <i>minimum</i>, which has
-just been treated of, presents a remarkable exception
-which is seen in cold countries as Sweden, Finland,
-St. Petersburgh, &amp;c. In these countries, exceptions
-occur most frequently in the months of December and
-January, in short in winter. Different causes have
-been supposed to account for this exception: there is
-but one however, which will explain it well&mdash;that is
-the manner in which the inhabitants of these countries
-are clothed during the cold season. By means
-of dress and warmth they then create an artificial climate
-by which they are enabled to resist the rigor
-of that in which they dwell. The whole body is
-enveloped in numerous thick and warm garments,
-which fit accurately, envelope it exactly and preserve
-for the body its natural temperature: placing these
-individuals in a position analogous to that of vegetables
-which are hastened in their growth by manure.
-Farther they preserve in their dwellings a degree of
-temperature which would be insupportable in a temperate
-climate. In fact if the inhabitants of the polar
-regions should keep civil registers of births, their examination
-would doubtless demonstrate that in these
-rude climates, the fine season is not that of amours.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_209">209</span>
-It is well known that puberty in these countries is
-more precocious, as is the case under the tropics.
-Thus the Samoid women menstruate at the age of
-11 years and are often mothers at 12. (Klingstadt,
-<i>Memoire sur les Samoides</i>, pp. 41. &amp; 43.) This is
-not to be wondered at when we consider that they
-live in subterranean caves, where there is a stifling
-heat produced by throwing water on redhot stones.
-Dwellings then in cold countries may be considered
-as hot houses which act on man as they do on vegetables.</p>
-
-<p>These facts established, let us consider their consequences;
-do they not prove, that an artificial climate
-may develope the venereal sense prematurely or
-too vividly? That on the coming of winter a young
-man ought not to be clothed too warm? That too
-many quilts should not be put on the bed at night?
-That the cold should be braved? That we should forbid
-too long a continuance in warm rooms? These principles
-are deduced naturally from observations on the
-seasons. It is unnecessary to say, that these rules,
-good as they are, are more particularly applicable to
-those who are suspected or convicted of masturbation.
-In our preceding remarks we have paid regard only to
-the temperate zones of the two hemispheres, that is,
-to those countries where there are four distinct seasons
-nearly equal in length. But if we approach the
-equinoctial line, those regions of the globe where the
-year is divided into a very long summer and a very
-short winter, the influence of seasons is effaced by
-that of <i>climate</i>. We shall not repeat in this place all
-that has been said in regard to the precocity of the inhabitants
-of warm countries, their ardor in love, the
-excesses to which they are addicted, the rapidity with
-which they grow old; all these facts are well known.
-But we will make a remark which seems to us important:
-if the habitual and long continued action of
-solar heat, hastens the appearances of the venereal
-sense, and gives it so much power, why will not the
-continued action of any other heat, for instance of
-clothing, dwellings, baths, &amp;c., produce a similar result?
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_210">210</span>
-It seems to us that the admission of the first
-fact necessarily implies the other. Thus whether we
-regard the influence of seasons exerted around us, or
-that of climates which are far distant, we always arrive
-at the conclusion that by a delicate education,
-and by taking care to preserve children from the slightest
-cold, we hasten the excitement of their sensual
-feelings, to which they are more liable to become victims.
-Hence in prescribing a change of scene for
-a young man addicted to onanism, we should be careful
-not to expose him to hot climates.</p>
-
-<p>Are there any emanations which have the power of
-deadening the venereal sense? From a case already
-mentioned, and which we owe to M. Villerm&eacute;, we
-might suspect that emanations from stagnant waters
-have this effect: but it is probable that if procreation
-is less active in marshy countries during the most unhealthy
-seasons, it is because the number of sick is
-greater. It is well known that notwithstanding all
-emanations, the venereal sense may be very precocious,
-and may lead whole communities to indulge in
-excesses: we might cite as instances the inhabitants
-of the marshy parts of the Landes of Bordeaux, and
-the Solognese.</p>
-
-<p>The power which certain odors have of exciting
-to desire is by no means doubtful, at least so far as
-animals are concerned. Most of the mammalia at
-the period of rutting, exhale certain emanations which
-serve to inform the male at a distance of the presence
-of a female and to excite in him the desire of copulation.
-Even in the insect kingdom some facts exist
-which cannot be accounted for except on the principle
-of odorous effluvia. Thus if we shut up in a perfectly
-close box a female bombyx, we shall soon see males
-flying around it, who cannot be guided there by the
-sense of sight. Does any thing similar occur in the
-human family? Many authors assert the affirmative.
-“Odors,” says Cabanis, “act powerfully on the nervous
-system: they incite it to all pleasurable sensations:
-they communicate to it this slight disturbance which
-seems to be inseparable from it, and this because they
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_211">211</span>
-exercise a special influence on the organs which are
-the seat of the most vivid pleasure granted us by nature.
-In infancy, the influence of smell is but slight:
-in old age, it is feeble: it is most active at the period
-of youth which is that of love.” (<i>Rapports du phys.
-an morale de l’homme</i>, vol. I, p. 222.) Among many
-nations even in remote antiquity, voluptuous females
-excited their visitors to desire by the cosmetic use of
-different perfumes, particularly by musk. This substance
-has been said to be capable of producing even
-nocturnal pollutions. (<i>Luc. Lebrœchus, Hist. Moschi</i>,
-ch. 24, p. 153.) On the other hand, we read that
-Henry IV. thought that the natural odor of the sexual
-parts was more powerful than any cosmetics. Notwithstanding
-these testimonials and many others of a
-similar character, which might be adduced, we believe
-that in our species, where the sense of smell has
-so little influence compared to what it has in animals,
-that odors have but a slight effect in exciting to sexual
-pleasures. We think it prudent however to forbid
-the abuse of cosmetics in young people.</p>
-
-<p>Irritation of the skin, particularly in the neighborhood
-of the sexual parts, may act on them as we have
-seen, and produce venereal desires. Debauched libertines
-have frequently sought pleasure in this, and
-have sometimes lashed themselves with thongs, or
-other instruments of torture. In the time of Nero, the
-art of invigorating the virile powers with green nettles
-was known and practised. Many authors have stated
-details on this topic which may be found in the treatise
-of Melbourne, (<i>De flagrorum usu in re venerea</i>, Lugd.
-Batav. 1643,<a id="FNanchor_2" href="#Footnote_2" class="fnanchor">2</a>) and an article by Virey. (<i>Dict. des Sc.
-Med.</i>, art. <i>Flagellation</i>.) The pleasures of flagellation,
-however, also have their limits: it has therefore been
-prescribed to deaden carnal desires, as well as to excite
-them. More than one saint has flagellated himself
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_212">212</span>
-with this hope. In order that it should be efficacious,
-it should be used with severity.</p>
-
-<p>It can easily be imagined that this remedy may have
-a very different effect from that proposed. Castigation,
-and also the denuding of the body, which is necessary,
-often have an effect on children, indicated by the erection
-of the penis. Young persons sometimes desire
-this punishment. The sensations caused by it have
-been so strong, as to be followed by an immediate
-emission. How many children have become addicted
-to onanism, in consequence of this imprudent punishment!
-how often has the fatal habit of onanism been
-encouraged by it! These consequences have been
-pointed out by many authors. Pic de la Mirandole,
-Rhodoginus, &amp;c., have related instances of it. The following
-is from Serrurier. “One of my school-fellows,”
-says he, “found an indescribable pleasure in being
-whipped: he took every occasion to provoke the master,
-who never pardoned an offender, but had him scourged,
-by individuals to whom this duty was committed.
-This same school-fellow declared that he was sorry
-when the punishment was ended, because then the
-pollution was not complete. What has been the consequence
-of this horrid discovery. The unhappy person
-became addicted to onanism. Reduced to the
-lowest stage of consumption, in consequence of the
-habitual loss of semen, his death presents us a picture
-of depravity, and an instance of the danger to which
-one is exposed by this fatal passion.” Castigation is
-much more to be dreaded when practised by one of an
-opposite sex from that of the patient. Even young
-children notice this difference. Rousseau, describing
-the effect produced on him by being punished by Mademoiselle
-Lambercier, says, he was then eight years
-old, “For a long time she confined herself to threats,
-and the threat of punishment seemed very dreadful to
-me; but after it was performed, I found it less terrible
-than I expected; so much so, that it required all
-my natural sweetness to prevent me from seeking a
-return of the punishment, by averting it: for I found
-in the pain, and even in the shame, a mixture of sensuality
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_213">213</span>
-which had left rather a desire, than a fear to be
-punished by the same hand. The same punishment
-from the hand of her brother would doubtless have
-been less agreeable.” Rousseau having exposed himself
-a second time to punishment, it was seen <i>by a
-certain sign</i>, that this chastisement did not produce
-the desired effect: he therefore escaped afterward.
-Thanks to his temperament, Rousseau did not contract,
-at that dangerous period, a habit which would have
-extinguished, at their source, those admirable faculties
-which were afterward developed.</p>
-
-<p>The importance of separating the sexes in schools
-can be seen from the preceding remarks: this is done
-in many institutions, and should be practised in all.
-The rod, too, should also be excluded from families,
-and physicians should explain to families the double
-danger of a loss of modesty, and of exciting the senses.</p>
-
-<p>Certain articles of clothing may excite the skin,
-cause an itching, and thus produce effects similar to
-those of flagellation. Haircloth and sackcloth, with
-which some orders of monks are now clothed, have
-contributed, it is said, together with the mode of life
-to that reputation for incontinence possessed by some
-orders of friars. A want of cleanliness has also had
-the same effect. Be this true or not, it is wise to avoid
-the use of flannels next the skin, particularly in young
-patients, and around the pelvis. Hence woollen pantaloons
-should always be lined. The importance of
-keeping the sexual organs clean, has already been
-pointed out; the same remarks apply to the whole body.</p>
-
-<p>This cleanliness must be maintained by lotions and
-baths. The former ought generally to be cold: this
-rule is seldom contra-indicated. As to baths, we would
-remark that hot baths ought seldom to be prescribed
-for onanists and for young persons generally, because
-of the excitement which they cause. Tepid baths
-should also be used with care, as they render one susceptible
-and delicate. Cold baths ought always then
-to be preferred, when the season and health of the patients
-permit. There are other rules to be mentioned
-hereafter.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_214">214</span></p>
-
-<p>The venereal appetite may be much modified by
-food and drinks. This passion and the excesses with
-which it is attended may be connected with the diet
-used. Hence when we attempt to cure a young person
-of onanism a good selection of food and drink is
-very essential. It is therefore important to state the
-dietetic conditions by which the venereal appetite is
-excited or depressed.</p>
-
-<p><i>Sine cerere et Baccho friget Venus</i> is an old
-proverb, which however is too obsolete. Generally
-speaking abundance of good food is more favorable to
-venereal desires than a contrary mode of diet. This
-may be seen on a large scale by comparing years of
-plenty with those of scarcity. We can then remark
-how injurious periods of public distress are to the procreative
-power. This has long been observed, but has
-now been demonstrated beyond a doubt, by the patient
-researches of Villerm&eacute;. He has ascertained from
-several statistical tables of population in France, that
-at the period of the revolution when the duty was removed
-from wine, salt, &amp;c., when the laborers found
-themselves unusually prosperous, when they indulged
-in feasts and celebrations, in short, lived better, the
-number of births evidently increased. Eleven tables
-were examined by Villerm&eacute;, and to this remark&mdash;he
-found but one exception. On the contrary, when the
-diet of the people is poor and insufficient, the number
-of conceptions diminishes and never resumes its
-level till abundance is restored. It would even seem
-that after the period of scarcity has passed away, it
-still continues to exercise an extraordinary degree of
-energy.</p>
-
-<p>These facts were very manifest after the bad harvest
-of 1816: the number of conceptions, proportionally
-speaking was less, from November 1816 to September
-1817, especially during the months of April,
-May, June, and July, than in other years. (<i>Ann. d’hyg.
-publ., Jun. 1834.</i>) Similar observations have been
-made in animals: it is remarked that the period of
-heat supervenes when they are best fed, and that generally
-they are much more productive when they are
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_215">215</span>
-domesticated than when in a wild state, where they
-are often liable to long fasts. Hence there is reason
-for prescribing fasting to deaden carnal passions.
-Villerm&eacute; has remarked that in all those catholic countries
-of which he has seen statistics, Lent, as it is
-now observed, and particularly as it was formerly
-kept, seems to exercise an unfavorable influence on
-generation.</p>
-
-<p>The facts which have been mentioned may be explained
-in several ways: first by the action of plenty
-and scarcity on the health of the public. Probably in
-times of scarcity, a state of things is observed analogous
-to what is seen in marshy countries during the
-reign of epidemics. The action of abundance on the
-power of procreation may be explained also by the
-direct influence of the labor of digestion on the organs
-where the venereal sense is located. It is known that
-amorous desires are often developed directly after taking
-food. Nocturnal pollutions sometimes occur directly
-after lying down. Serrurier speaks of a maniac
-who had seminal emissions on taking food after
-long abstinence. (<i>Dict. des Sc. Med.</i>, vol. xliv. p.
-116.) Farther the effect alluded to may be produced
-as is readily imagined, more easily and forcibly when
-the excitement attending the labor of digestion is excessive
-when for instance, the repast has been great,
-composed of many exciting and stimulant articles of
-food and of good wine or with a small quantity of
-alcoholic drinks. Those individuals who are subject
-to pollution, feel the direct influence of these circumstances.</p>
-
-<p>Beside the immediate effect mentioned, a warm and
-analeptic diet by giving the body an increase of excitement
-and force, may render amorous desires more
-frequent and vivid. Thus the habitual free use of
-meats, game, pork, ragouts, spices, heavy wines, liquors,
-coffee, &amp;c., must be considered as an indirect
-cause of venereal excesses, particularly if the persons
-who live on this regimen do not counteract its effects
-by active exercise. The use of vegetables, especially
-those which are not very nutritious, have contrary effects.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_216">216</span>
-This remark must not be considered too obsolete.
-A debilitating diet and excessive salacity
-sometimes coexist: The Landes of Gironde are a
-striking instance of this; their diet is very miserable;
-they live on vegetable soups made with rancid lard;
-broths of meal, of coarse bread, and water, pure or
-acidulated at most with vinegar, &amp;c. Hence they
-are extremely thin, are dark and sallow, and have an
-appearance of unhealthiness: this however does not
-prevent their indulgence in love, to which they are
-extremely addicted.</p>
-
-<p>Different articles of food have been mentioned as
-contributing more than any others to excite the genital
-powers. Among them are found <i>fishes</i>. It would
-seem that this quality has long been attributed to
-them; this opinion however has not been received by
-moderns with much credit until it was admitted doubtingly
-by Montesquieu. (<i>Del l’esprit des lois</i>, Book
-xxiii. ch. 15.) Many authors have admitted this to be
-fact on the authority of this great man, and then instead
-of investigating whether it was true or not have
-attempted to assign the reasons for it. Thus the prolifick
-virtue of fish has been said to depend on the aromatics
-and other condiments with which they are prepared;
-on their seasoning: on the phosphorus contained
-in their flesh and more particularly in their
-milt: and by this fact, that populations on the sea-coast
-live almost exclusively on fish. This has been
-carried still farther: the parts of fishes which furnish
-the most of the seminal material have been determined:
-and this property has been ascribed to the
-milt, either because the semen is here secreted, or on
-account of the phosphorus which Fourcroy and Vauquelin
-have discovered in it. Some fishes however are
-thought to induce venereal passions more than others.</p>
-
-<p>We have attempted to find the origin of this opinion
-in regard to fish but without success. In fact it
-has not the support of popular notoriety which arises
-insensibly from daily observation. Thus Benoislon
-has proved directly by statistical facts that fecundity
-is not greater among the inhabitants of maritime
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_217">217</span>
-coasts than among those who live in other places.
-(<i>Bulletin de F&eacute;russac</i>, Jan., 1827.) Villerm&eacute; has
-noticed that in Greenland and among the Esquimaux,
-who live principally on fish, on sea-calves, that is,
-aliments, containing these oily parts, which are regarded
-as so prolific, women have rarely more than two
-or three children during their life. Besides if fish
-has the property ascribed to it, why is it that during
-Lent, that period of the year when this form of food
-is most used, the procreative power should be most
-inactive; a fact which is proved from documents collected
-in almost every country by the laborious investigations
-of Villerm&eacute;. (<i>Annales d’hygiene publ.</i>, Jan.
-1831.) Hence it is extremely improbable that fish
-possesses this property, which it is important to establish
-in order not to discard from the regimen of youth,
-an article of diet which being both nutritious and
-slightly stimulating, is well adapted to prevent genital
-excitement or to subdue it.</p>
-
-<p>Many other articles of food beside fish have been
-regarded as aphrodisiac. Many insect eating reptiles, a
-bird called torcol and numerous insects of which it is
-useless to speak. Eggs have also been regarded as
-having the same property, and also truffles, mushrooms,
-artichokes, celery, cocoa and all its preparations,
-onions and condiments as ginger, pepper, and
-vanilla, and finally certain fruits as strawberries, apricots,
-peaches, pineapples, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p>Among the articles which we have named there are
-certainly some which being heating and exciting, may
-cause desire although containing nothing more specific
-than a great many substances which are esteemed as
-antiaphrodisiac, because being cooling and soothing
-they may produce the opposite effect. Among these
-latter, we find milk, which, according to Ste. Marie,
-generally contributes less to form the semen than
-most other articles of food. Among these also we
-may mention fresh vegetables and particularly the
-sorrel, purslain, lettuce, endive, cucumber, mushroom,
-melons, &amp;c. To these may be added the flesh of
-young animals, chicken, lamb, veal, &amp;c., and also
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_218">218</span>
-cooling drinks, as orgeat, lemonade, &amp;c. The regimen
-best adapted for appeasing all carnal desires consists
-as we have seen in an antiphlogistic diet which
-is composed of those fluids or solids which when introduced
-into the stomach are digested and assimilated
-with the slightest possible degree of excitement and
-heat. This regimen is that which should be prescribed
-to those patients who possess a certain degree
-of vigor and wish to protect themselves against urgent
-and dangerous desires.</p>
-
-<p>Different medicines have also been prescribed for
-the same purpose: many of them act in the same
-manner as the articles of food we have mentioned: of
-this character are tisans of marshmallows, violets,
-barley, emulsions, water distilled from lettuce, purslain,
-&amp;c.: of a similar character are iced drinks, ice given
-internally, and even prepared ices. To calm the excitement
-of the genital organs drugs having a positive
-influence on the nervous system are also administered.
-Thus camphor given alone or in combination
-with nitre has often been prescribed for this purpose.
-The special action of this article on the urinary passages,
-leads to the belief that in some cases it may be
-useful. Primrose and St. Basil have boasted of the
-internal use of cicuta for moderating too ardent desires.
-Opium and its preparations have been prescribed
-for the same purpose. The use of this article by the
-Orientals and its effects upon them render us rather
-suspicious of it; there may be cases however in which
-it is useful. Belladonna deserves more confidence.
-Dr. Powell, in the London medical magazine for April,
-1824, relates the case of a young girl 27 years old,
-who for more than three years experienced twice a
-month and even more frequently violent attacks of a
-libidinous hysteria: her cure was attributed to a potion
-composed in part of the tincture of belladonna, which
-was used to such an extent as to produce dilatation of
-the pupils. The results obtained by Chaussier, and by
-many others, from applying belladonna to the neck of
-the uterus either to combat rigidity in labor or to alleviate
-puerperal convulsions, lead us to think that
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_219">219</span>
-medicine may prove efficacious in satyriasis and nymphomania.
-Thridace also may be tried in these cases,
-and Angelot has related a case of spermatorrhœa
-supervening in consequence of excesses at the table
-which was cured by this remedy. Distilled cherry-tree
-water also might be added which Louyer Villermay
-indicates as useful in nymphomania.</p>
-
-<p>Boracic acid, formerly termed the sedative salts of
-Homberg, has also been recommended to subdue amorous
-passions. This is true likewise of nitre, which,
-under this name, or that of Sal Prunelle and mineral
-crystal, has been much esteemed as an antiaphrodisiac.
-The use of this remedy according to Baldassar
-cured the man, who demanded so earnestly the removal
-of his testes, and whose case has already been
-mentioned: this salt was used because Prevatius, a
-physician at Pavia, having administered it to a man
-for an affection of the bladder rendered him impotent.
-The hemp and the willow have also been recommended:
-Etmuller believes particularly in the action
-of this latter; and recommends the extract of its
-leaves, and the sap obtained from its young branches
-in spring. (<i>Trait du bon choix des medicamens</i>,
-1710. Lyons.)</p>
-
-<p>But among all drugs, those which are the longest
-known, and which were most esteemed, are the <i>agnus
-castus</i> or <i>vitex</i>, and the <i>nenuphar</i>. Human credulity
-is severely taxed, to believe what has been said as to
-the virtues of these articles. The Greek women, according
-to Dioscorides, slept during the festivals of
-Ceres, on the leaves of the agnus castus to preserve
-their chastity. Arnaud de Villeneuve states that
-an infallible mode of preserving the breast from all
-men’s attempts, is to carry a knife, the handle of which
-is made of this wood. Even now its leaves and seeds
-are used both externally and internally in monasteries
-to support more easily the rigors of celibacy. At present,
-however, no one believes in its virtues. The same
-is true of the nenuphar. Its reputation, as soothing
-the genital organs, belongs to the early periods of sciences.
-It is mentioned in Dioscorides and Galen, and
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_220">220</span>
-its history is as fabulous as that of the agnus-castus.
-The list of antiaphrodisiacs would terminate here, if
-Montegre had not mentioned a tree called mairkonsia,
-which grew in the East Indies, and which was used
-by some fakirs to render themselves impotent. Every
-day those children, who are designed to be fakirs,
-swallow a small roll of its leaves: the dose is gradually
-increased, and at the age of twenty-five, the effect
-is irrevocably produced. This tree is yet to be known
-by scientific men. (<i>Dict. des Se. Med.</i>, <i>Art. Continence</i>.)</p>
-
-<p>Besides those articles which act as stimulants on
-the genital organs specially, these latter are excited by
-whatever tends to increase the sensibility in general.
-A great degree of susceptibility, and a moderate development
-of the venereal sense, may co-exist, and are
-often found combined: but this only proves that the
-genital apparatus may escape certain influences, and
-not respond to the excitements which are impressed on
-it. Thus, whatever <i>tends</i> to develop, or to diminish
-the sensibility of a subject, must be considered not as
-necessarily modifying that of the genital organs, but
-as having the power to modify it, and as exercising this
-power in many cases.</p>
-
-<p>Now if we consider that the abuses of the genital
-organs arise most generally, because the sensibility of
-these organs has been excited too soon, or too vividly,
-we can imagine that a very great degree of susceptibility
-may predispose to these abuses, and, that consequently,
-to prevent and repress them, we must attend
-to every thing which favors the development of the
-genital organs. The power of sensation, like that of
-thought and action, is in many respects just what it is
-formed. The <i>education</i>, that is, the cultivation of
-these three faculties, may then give the senses a precocious
-language, and become indirectly a principle of
-excess. It may also, when properly directed, be a
-powerful means of preventing any excess. Let us see
-then how education acts, and how it is directed.</p>
-
-<p>It is only by exercise that the faculties are cultivated.
-It would be very wrong, however, to suppose that each
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_221">221</span>
-one of them has an individual existence, and by use
-may be developed separately, and independent of the
-others. The human faculties seem to have a certain
-extent of power in common, which they divide in such
-a manner that one cannot increase except at the expense
-of the others. An individual who possesses excessive
-sensibility, rarely enjoys a great degree of
-muscular vigor. Those men who are noted for muscular
-strength, are seldom distinguished for the brilliancy
-of their intellect. Education then acts in two
-ways: directly, by developing the faculties which it
-exercises, and indirectly, by opposing the progress of
-those which it neglects. What it gives to one, it takes
-from another: it is both a positive, and a negative
-power. As to the modes of directing it, they act by
-regulating the use of the three faculties during the
-period of life when they are forming. This is not the
-place to say how far education should be carried, so
-that, in a physical, intellectual, and moral point of
-view, it should be good: we seek only to determine
-what it ought to be, in order that a too vivid, or too
-precocious a facility to receive impressions, may not
-become the causes of venereal excesses.</p>
-
-<p>It is not among the working classes, that those subject
-to hysteria and hypochondria, are most numerous.
-The fatigue of body, when constant, dulls the senses.
-On the other hand, whatever enervates, renders one
-susceptible to excesses. These facts, which are generally
-known, and are confirmed by daily observation,
-ought to show the influence of exercise and rest on the
-venereal passion. Onanism is arrested in those children,
-much more readily, who are extremely active and
-always in exercise, than in those who are sedentary.
-The period of puberty, this emancipation of the genital
-organs, is later, by two or three years, in those individuals
-who take just enough of repose to rest them from
-fatigue, than in those who take exercise simply because
-wearied of repose. Other things being equal, the adult
-who depends upon his daily labor for his bread, thinks
-less of sexual pleasures than the idler. Helvetius (<i>de
-l’homme sect.</i> 10, <i>note</i> 4,) attributes the lascivious tastes
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_222">222</span>
-of the Asiatics to their idleness, and the indifference
-of the Canadians to the pleasures of love, to the fatigues
-experienced by hunting and fishing. Villerm&eacute;
-has attempted to show by statistics the influence of
-great labor on conceptions, but has not accomplished
-it. He, however, is disposed to regard the influence
-of fatigue on the sexual feelings, as the cause of the
-enormous difference said to have been observed in the
-Antilles, between the fecundity of the black slaves,
-and that of the whites. He remembers to have read,
-that in 1798, at St. Domingo, three marriages of blacks
-produced only two children, while each union between
-whites produced three children.</p>
-
-<p>It may be seen from the preceding remarks to what
-extent exercise is useful to young children. Unfortunately,
-the intellectual and moral necessities of our
-age cause physical education to be sacrificed in many
-respects. How many desires must necessarily be cherished,
-by confining the physical activity of young people,
-chained down as it were, hour after hour. How
-many men of mind have protested against the brief
-period of recreation allowed in our schools. Mr.
-Taillefer has done this in an excellent work published
-in 1824, on the improvement to be introduced in schools.
-This is true, also, of Pavet de Courtailles and Simon,
-(<i>Hygiene des Colleges, and Hygiene de la jeunesse</i>,)
-and in America by Dr. A. Brigham, of Hartford, whose
-work entitled, <i>The Influence of Mental Cultivation
-upon Health</i>, is full of judicious precept and sound logic.
-Gymnastic exercises, which are now beginning to be
-generally used in boys’ schools, and to be adopted in
-some seminaries for young ladies, compensate in some
-measure for their enervating education. Simon (of
-Metz) asserts that masturbation, formerly so destructive
-in the Orphan Asylum at Berne, has been expelled
-from it by introducing exercises. He adds, too, that
-this scourge has also disappeared from the schools of
-Switzerland, since mutual instruction was introduced,
-which, as is well known, obliges children to change
-their position frequently.</p>
-
-<p>A very active life may remedy a too great degree of
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_223">223</span>
-lasciviousness. Hunting, particularly, has been recommended
-for this purpose. ‘Diana has been regarded
-as the enemy of Love,’ says Rousseau, “and
-the allegory is just: the languor of love only comes
-from sweet repose. Violent exercise extinguishes the
-tender emotions.” Rullier has known hunting to produce
-in a man forty years old, who was passionately
-addicted to it, a true anaphrodisia, which disappeared
-when the patient adopted, in accordance with the advice
-of his physician, another mode of life. Some exercises,
-however, produce a contrary effect, viz.: those
-which excite the genital organs directly. Riding in a
-carriage, especially if it jolts much, and still further
-riding on horseback, may act in this manner. This
-effect was known to the ancient authors. Aristotle
-speaks of it. All those accustomed to riding know
-that the motions of the horse often produce an erection,
-and sometimes an involuntary emission of semen. A
-similar occurrence may take place from riding in a carriage.
-Serrurier has known this to happen in himself.</p>
-
-<p>The sitting posture, when long continued, excites the
-genital organs. Simon thinks so; because this attitude,
-by the pain and obstruction which it causes to
-the circulation, brings the blood to the lower parts of
-the trunk, and keeps it there: hence, it exposes the
-young man to excitement of the genital organs, and to
-engorgements of the spermatic cord: even hemorrhoids
-appear in those who ride and sit much. This author
-concludes by condemning the custom, in schools, of
-keeping the students sitting the greater part of the day.
-He thinks that the number of hours spent in school
-should be less, and that the students should study as
-many of their lessons as possible, in the erect posture.
-He recommends, also, that the seats should be so constructed
-as not to generate much heat, as do those
-which are stuffed.</p>
-
-<p>The action of intellectual labor is extremely analogous
-to that of muscular exertion. Persons whose
-minds are much occupied, who are devoted to their
-studies, are generally but slightly sensual in their feelings.
-There are some literary men who thus have become
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_224">224</span>
-prematurely impotent. On the other hand, individuals
-whose minds are naturally dull and heavy, the
-imbeciles and idiots, are frequently remarkable for their
-extreme salacity. The cultivation of the intellect
-then is not in itself a predisposing cause of venereal
-abuses, but it may become so indirectly, either by the
-physical inaction which it demands, or by the nature
-of the ideas it excites. We have spoken of the former,
-and will now consider the latter.</p>
-
-<p>The moral influences, that is, those which are impressed
-on the senses through the medium of the intellect,
-often predispose young patients to the abuses of
-which we are treating. The action of these influences
-is direct: it is by the impressions which they develop,
-that they may give to the senses the power of holding
-a language, and of exercising a precocious influence.
-They are particularly to be dreaded when they address
-the instinct of propagation, and excite it before the
-organized system is perfectly developed. The moral
-education also, that education which consists in keeping
-from the young certain impressions, does not act
-until their time has come, and must be considered as
-one of the most efficacious modes of preventing the
-premature abuse of venereal pleasures.</p>
-
-<p>Notions of love may, when acquired too soon, excite
-in the soul a sensation which is first vague, then more
-precise, and which only requires an opportunity to become
-a fatal passion. Thus the reading of romances,
-and books which always interest the soul in love scenes
-which are painted in bright colors, ought to be strictly
-forbidden to young people. The same is true of theatrical
-representations. Here love is in a measure
-materialized: we see the persons who are animated
-by this passion: they express themselves in a manner
-to make one really think they feel it: they attempt by
-every kind of coquetry to deceive and delude the public,
-and even to excite desires. Art lends her aid to
-eloquence and gesture to move the heart, and the fear
-of failing to enlist the feelings, often induces the actor
-to overstep the bounds of nature, and then he represents
-libertinism, not love. Conceive of the effect
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_225">225</span>
-which this must produce upon one who is uninitiated,
-who is thus, as it were, introduced into a new world:
-the venereal sense becomes excited sooner than it
-ought to be, and desires demand to be satisfied before
-the body has attained its strength, and consequently
-before legitimate pleasures are practicable or allowable.</p>
-
-<p>Balls, parties, and assemblies, all opportunities of
-seeing the world in its gayest and most attractive attire,
-are dangerous to youth. Generally speaking, the
-habitual intercourse of the two sexes ought to be avoided
-as much as possible. In a report made to the Industrial
-Society of Malhouse, as to the number of
-hours which children ought to labor daily, the evening
-labor which brings the different sexes together in the
-workshops, is mentioned as a great source of trouble.
-One advantage of schools is, that the different sexes
-are kept distinct. In families, and we do not except
-those which are models of morality, the opportunities
-of intercourse between boys and girls are too frequent.
-Certain emotions, of an obscure character at first, are
-felt: curiosity is excited, and soon the secret of solitary
-indulgence is found. Young persons may also,
-under their paternal roof, acquire dangerous notions in
-regard to the material differences between the sexes,
-and other facts which are the consequence of them.
-“I do not see,” says Rousseau, “but one mode of preserving
-in children their innocence; which is, that all
-those around should respect and love it.” Unfortunately,
-the smallness of dwelling houses in cities, and
-other necessities, particularly that of watching their
-offspring obliges parents to keep their children near
-them, and their curiosity being always on the alert,
-often leads them to unfortunate discoveries. Abbe
-Chappe has stated the manner in which the Samoides
-live in their huts, as an active cause of libertinism.
-These individuals do not use beds, but lie, almost
-naked, on straw and on benches. The children witness
-much that should be concealed from them; become
-loose in their morals, and hence they have to be
-married early to prevent excesses. (<i>Travels in Siberia,
-Vol. 1.</i>) If accidental observations in the most
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_226">226</span>
-moral families may be attended with the results just
-mentioned, what must be the consequence of constant
-depraved manners; their empire is so great at this
-age when the mind is unexperienced, and is always
-ready to adopt the impressions of the moment. In
-pity then to youth, let every magistrate prevent the
-publicity of immodesty and vice; do not let prostitution
-be sanctioned by the law: for when our sons and
-daughters are liable to find out in an instant what we
-have so carefully concealed from them, the responsibility
-should rest not simply on those unfortunate beings
-who follow such a course of life, but also on the part
-of those who having the power to prevent it, close
-their eyes, and permit, or even authorize it.</p>
-
-<p><i>Rules relating to the direct and special causes of
-onanism.</i> The habit of onanism may have three origins:
-it may be, 1st, that the individual discovers it
-spontaneously; 2d, that the vice may be taught him;
-3d, that being unable to satisfy his desires for coition,
-he seeks a resource in onanism.</p>
-
-<p>We have already seen that an unusual irritation of
-the genito-urinary mucous membrane may develop venereal
-excitement capable of causing satyriasis and
-nymphomania. This irritation may also act in another
-manner. The itching it occasions may cause the hands
-to be carried to the genital organs; unknown sensations
-are produced, and masturbation is accidentally
-discovered. We see by this how necessary it is in
-young patients to protect these parts from all sources
-of itching. Sometimes, too, a knowledge of this vice
-comes from accident. Hence children at an early age
-should be taught habits of modesty; all handling of the
-genital organs should be prohibited. Children should
-not be allowed to keep their hands in their pockets.
-Neither should they be left alone long: the necessity
-of observing, which is so vivid at their age, is exercised
-on themselves, when they find nothing else to
-interest them, and they sometimes make dangerous
-observations. It is in bed particularly that this evil is
-most liable to happen; hence they should be taken
-from their beds as soon as they awake, and the hour of
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_227">227</span>
-rest should not long precede that of sleep. Many
-children have been led to onanism by their efforts to
-resist the wish to urinate. The pressure exercised on
-the penis by pressing the thighs firmly against each
-other, has excited sensations which they have attempted
-to re-produce. We mention this cause of onanism
-as being much more common than is generally supposed.</p>
-
-<p>There is another cause, which is much more rare,
-but which deserves to be known: domestic animals,
-as cats and dogs, have sometimes licked the sexual
-parts of young children, particularly girls, and have
-excited a sense which ought to sleep. Hufeland publishes
-a remarkable case of this character in support
-of some peculiar views on venereal disease, and adds
-that Ruggieri some years before, published in the
-medical journals, a case where, by the licking of a dog,
-ulcers of a bad character were developed in the genitals
-of two old maids. (<i>Bibliot. Med.</i>, May, 1821, p. 250.)</p>
-
-<p>Most frequently, however, the habit of onanism
-arises from direct provocation, from instruction. Sometimes
-this provocation can be attributed only to imprudence.
-Thus nurses sometimes titillate the genital organs
-in children to stop their cries. We have already
-stated, from Biett, the instance of a young girl who
-had thus contracted this bad habit, and who was cured
-by the amputation of the clitoris: this case arose probably
-only from ignorance. Sometimes, however, servants
-teach their masters’ children from wilfulness.
-One should be particularly careful of female servants,
-as it is to them that young children are generally entrusted.
-Male domestics are generally to be feared,
-only for those young persons who are near the age of
-puberty. The wish to please their young master, often
-induces them to give the most disgusting lessons.
-Most frequently, however, these lessons come from
-their associates, the older boys teaching those who are
-younger.</p>
-
-<p>If among young patients onanism is practised for itself,
-it is afterward only an apology for the want of
-more legitimate enjoyments. Celibacy, in adults, is
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_228">228</span>
-with some few exceptions the only cause of onanism.
-This practice, and others still more revolting, are common
-among monastic orders, as the consequence and
-punishment of vows made contrary to the laws of nature.
-Polygamy, the quasi celibacy to which the females
-of many countries submit, also causes great derangements
-in the system. A kind of consumption
-has been described to which the Turkish women are
-subject, and which can be traced to no other cause.
-(<i>Journal de Med., Vol.</i> 44, p. 539.) It is in prisons,
-however, where there is no moral feeling, that this vice
-is most prevalent. Villerm&eacute; remarks, that the amount
-of this vice in prisons, is almost incredible. Young
-and old abandon themselves to it so freely, that the
-physicians of the prisons of the department of the
-Seine, attribute the frequency of pulmonary consumption,
-of cramps in the stomach, muscular debility,
-weakness of sight, and of the intellectual faculties, to
-this cause alone. This physician considers onanism
-as one of the causes of the excessive mortality existing
-in the depots of mendicity. (<i>Dict. des Sc. Med.</i>, <i>art.
-Prison</i>.)</p>
-
-<p>Sailors also often abandon themselves during their
-long voyages to this vice. Many adults, and particularly
-females, seek in solitary indulgence a compensation
-for the restraints imposed on them by laws and
-customs. Even animals indulge. Montegre has published
-some interesting details on this subject. (<i>Dict.
-des Sc. Med.</i>, <i>art. Continence</i>.)</p>
-
-<p>We have said that onanism is performed so easily
-that it is much more to be feared than sexual intercourse.
-If then the physician has to choose between
-the two, he ought not to hesitate. In human things
-we cannot always choose between an injury and a
-benefit. Sometimes the selection is between a greater
-and a lesser evil. We may then without detriment to
-physical and moral laws, counsel the young man
-who indulges in onanism, to gratify his feelings in a
-less dangerous manner. This also was Rousseau’s
-opinion. He says, in his Emile, “If a tyrant must
-conquer you, I would prefer to yield you to that from
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_229">229</span>
-which you can be released most easily: and you can
-be weaned from females more readily than from yourself.”
-The physician in these cases should recommend
-marriage.</p>
-
-<p>This advice, too, is sanctioned by experience. Many
-young men after indulging in sexual intercourse, have
-commenced onanism; despising the latter, after exercising
-the former. “We have known a father,” say
-Fournier and Begin, “who finding his son disobeyed
-his advice, married him, and with success.” The same
-remedy has often been tried, and with good effect. A
-single coition has often sufficed to appease excessive
-ardor in females, and we could state several cases of
-nymphomania which have been thus immediately
-cured. Pregnancy also has been followed by the same
-results: this fact was known to the ancients and is
-mentioned in a work ascribed to Hippocrates. Panarolus,
-Matthew de Grado, and others, have related
-cases of females affected with nymphomania, who are
-never calm except during pregnancy. The following
-fact, observed by Esquirol, shows the influence of coition
-and pregnancy on the genital system. “A strong
-and healthy girl, of good family, nineteen years old,
-became affected with hysteria, with violent and almost
-constant convulsions. After a long and ineffectual
-course of medical treatment, this young woman disappeared
-from her father’s house, and all inquiries for
-her were in vain. After a few months, Esquirol, passing
-in the evening through a noted and dissipated
-quarter of Paris, was stopped by a female, whom he
-recognised to be his patient. On inquiring what she
-was doing, she answered, “Getting well.” For eighteen
-months this girl was a prostitute of the lowest
-order. She miscarried twice, and finally returned to
-her father’s house perfectly well. This woman is now
-married, a mother, and extremely circumspect in her
-conduct.” (<i>Dict. des Sc. Med.</i>, <i>art. Continence</i>.)</p>
-
-<h3 id="Second_indication">&sect; 2. <small>SECOND INDICATION. TO RESIST THE DESIRE OF ONANISM.</small></h3>
-
-<p>When a desire can be satisfied, and is not, it is because
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_230">230</span>
-the will is enchained, or this is distracted by
-circumstances more powerful than desire. Thus then
-it is possible to inspire an individual with certain fears,
-or by distracting his thoughts to make his will resist
-his desires.</p>
-
-<p>The fear of God and his ministers may have great
-influence over the minds of many, and preserve strict
-continence. The fear of confession has often, to our
-knowledge, produced a denial of desire in young persons.
-At the present day, however, this latter influence
-cannot be depended on much, and confessors, by
-their imprudent questions, have often excited curiosity
-in hearts yet innocent.</p>
-
-<p>The fear of transgressing the rules of modesty
-taught in youth, restrains some individuals. Others
-abstain because they fear the correction and reproaches
-of a father, and think on the shame with which they
-would be covered were their secret known. Chastisement
-has sometimes had the effect of rendering the
-guilty ones very circumspect. But of all fears, that
-which has produced the most effect on onanists, is the
-fear of disease and death.</p>
-
-<p>Onanists rarely believe what is told them by parents
-and others, as to the dangers of their course, but place
-more credit on what they read in books; and of these,
-Tissot is the only one which possesses much reputation.
-It has been much read, and although attended
-with great good effects, it has not always been useful.
-Many think its statements exaggerated, and therefore
-injurious. We have known it to fail entirely of its
-desired purpose, and to cause deplorable effects. On
-the whole, however, it has done much good, which it
-would be unjust not to acknowledge. At the same
-time, we must say, that a knowledge of the reproaches
-against Tissot, and the desire to avoid them, have had
-no influence over a word of the present treatise. In
-composing it we have been actuated by a desire to tell
-the truth, and have more than once remarked that we
-must not judge of the common effects of onanism by
-the cases which have been published, as those only
-which are very severe, appear in print. We have also
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_231">231</span>
-said that the most common effects of onanism consist
-rather in certain vitiations of temperament, than in
-diseases having a precise form, and a distinct place in
-the systems of nosology. We have also shown how
-rapidly the health is generally restored when indulgence
-in onanism ceases. But this was done not to
-exercise any influence over the minds of those who
-might read the book, but simply to do justice to the
-truth.</p>
-
-<p>The word of a physician may frequently however
-produce a change in the patient; more frequently than
-the reading of a book. He should not hesitate to
-speak boldly, for if it be requisite he can afterward
-modify his opinion. The effect of an opinion as follows,
-“In three months you will be a dead man” is
-often very great. The onanist trembles and becomes
-pale: his heart beats quickly, his strength fails. Do
-not regret it, it is not by encouragement that you will
-save him from himself. Add however that in a few
-months he will be a well man, provided he will renounce
-his bad habits. These words of hope will
-console him and encourage him to resist his evil desires.
-Frequently however the impression caused by
-this language is soon effaced. In this case another
-remedy must be sought for. The language and tone
-of the physician too should vary according to the person
-addressed; but he should always present the certainty
-of death if the vice is continued, and that of relief
-if it be arrested.</p>
-
-<p>Sometimes the onanist leaves his old habit very
-gradually, a course which is recommended by Swediaur.
-This course may be pursued for two reasons:
-the first is that it is more easy to quit this habit by
-degrees than to break it off violently: the second that
-it is not always prudent to leave off habits suddenly
-even if they are bad. Persons have sometimes been
-blinded by being taken from their dungeons too suddenly.</p>
-
-<p>When a young man however finds himself unable
-to resist the force of his desires notwithstanding the
-perusal of books and the advice of his physician,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_232">232</span>
-there is still one resource, which is the sight of an
-onanist dying. Approach and look at him: he was
-recently healthy and his prospects bright. He indulged
-in onanism: see what he is now; friends and
-physicians remonstrated with him but in vain; he
-would listen to nothing, he believed nothing. Now
-however he believes, but it is too late, for in a few
-days his earthly career will be closed. If terror does
-not affect him who witnesses this doleful picture you
-cannot produce it. A surgeon named Bertrand aware
-of the power of this mode of instruction constructed
-in wax two figures which represented onanists of both
-sexes. These figures were exhibited to those suspected
-of indulging in onanism and produced it is said
-very beneficient effects.</p>
-
-<p>The ancients and we will cite Avicenna, and Paul
-of Egina, recommend that we should attempt to excite
-in the minds of those addicted to this vice an interest
-about external objects. <i>Distraction</i> is then a
-mode which may be usefully recommended to those
-onanists over whom their desires have not much
-power. Travelling, study, recreation, in fact every
-thing which can give the mind a strong and new direction,
-should be recommended, and may have the
-effect of distracting the onanist from his bad habit.</p>
-
-<h3 id="Third_indication">&sect; 3. <small>THIRD INDICATION. REMOVE FROM THOSE WHO HAVE THE WISH TO MASTURBATE
-THE POWER OF DOING SO.</small></h3>
-
-<p>Masturbation is possible
-only under the two following conditions: first
-there must be an opportunity to indulge in secret;
-next there must be a possibility of indulging. Hence
-by frustrating these conditions we can prevent onanism,
-the wishes of the onanist to the contrary notwithstanding.</p>
-
-<p>The opportunities for onanism are all embraced
-under one term, <i>isolation</i>. It is necessary for the
-onanist to be alone. Hence watchfulness, that precaution
-which makes the young man constantly observes,
-which exposes him every moment to detection
-and consequently to shame, to reproaches and to punishment
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_233">233</span>
-for his fault, is a powerful means of preventing
-it.</p>
-
-<p>Watchfulness should be particularly practised over
-young people, when they are undressed, in bed, in the
-bath or in the privy. Hence the young patient should
-undress, go to bed and rise under your inspection. If
-this be not sufficient, he should share your bed. This
-measure is frequently the only way to prevent onanism.
-In large boarding schools there should be no
-private rooms: the sleeping chambers should be extensive,
-and a lamp, which would give sufficient light
-to assist your watchfulness, but not enough to prevent
-sleep, should burn in it all night. The masters and
-those who have charge of the pupils ought to examine
-in silence at different hours and the most perfect quiet
-should exist in the apartment. Here too the hours of
-retirement and of rising should be calculated according
-to the ages, so that the suspected or guilty might
-never go to bed except to sleep. Be watchful of those
-who stay long in privies: those however with ample
-accommodations are not so dangerous as those which
-are single. In some schools the doors of the privies
-are open at the top, so that an adult can look into
-them. Need we add that persons who are suspected
-should be watched in the bath.</p>
-
-<p>Onanism is executed with the hand and thighs on
-the sexual parts or by rubbing these parts against external
-bodies. Different modes have been proposed
-to obviate and prevent these. The most simple of all
-is to oblige the children to keep their hands out of
-bed. This plan when it can be observed is often sufficient,
-particularly in boys. Besides this we knew of
-only one remedy, the purpose of what can be concealed,
-viz., the application of a cold cataplasm to the
-sexual parts, a plan we have recommended several
-times. Pavet de Courtielle proposes the use of a
-chemise reaching below the feet and which is drawn
-together at the bottom: this remedy may be efficacious.
-The remedies which remain to be treated of
-are essentially coercive: hence the chance of success
-is smaller the older and stronger the patients are.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_234">234</span></p>
-
-<p>The hands may be tied to keep them from the sexual
-organs, and the feet also may be tied so as to keep
-the thighs separated. The child too may be placed in
-a straight waistcoat fastened behind, which may force
-the arms to rest on the chest. Different apparatus
-has been contrived also to keep the thighs asunder.
-One is composed of thick pieces of cork which are
-attached to the inside of the thighs. Drawers opening
-behind are sometimes used: these serve to imprison
-the lower part of the trunk.</p>
-
-<p>A kind of truss is sometimes used to preserve the
-sexual parts from external contact. The principal
-piece of this is of metal, either silver or tin: for females
-its form is triangular, and for boys it represents
-a sort of mould, in which the penis and scrotum may
-be placed: the bandage is kept in place by springs,
-like those of herniary bandages. To add to the security
-of this apparatus it is sometimes applied to a
-dress which opens only behind. In young and feeble
-children these means are exceedingly efficacious, as
-experience has proved. The art of the onanist has
-even sometimes evaded these bandages. The following
-case occurred in the practice of Reveille Pariset;
-a little girl 7 years old, whose health failed every day
-having been detected in onanism, her mother instead
-of reproaching her, gave her to understand that it was
-the custom to apply a bandage to girls of her age.
-This bandage was fitted very accurately and attained
-the purpose desired; the health of the child being
-rapidly established. Soon however the symptoms reappeared
-and more violently than before. The bandage
-was examined and it was found to be undisturbed.
-She however was watched and it was found that she
-used a quill for the purposes of onanism, which she
-slipped in under the bandage. After this, the mother
-stayed with her daughter all the time, and by her vigilance
-the child was saved.</p>
-
-<p>These mechanical bandages have other inconveniences
-which limit their use. First they cannot be
-employed in boarding schools as they become the subject
-of remark; and then they keep up in the genital
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_235">235</span>
-organs a constant heat, irritation and moisture. The
-edges of the principal piece also may cause deep excoriations.
-For all this, however they are often useful
-and ought not to be neglected.</p>
-
-<h2 id="PART_II_CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II.<br />
-
-<small>OF THE MODE OF REPAIRING THE INJURIES ARISING
-FROM VENEREAL EXCESSES.</small></h2>
-
-<p>In therapeutics we proceed in two ways; sometimes
-tracing the symptoms to their cause, we attempt to
-destroy this cause in the organ in which it is situated,
-and sometimes we attend only to symptoms. The
-same plan is applicable to the abuses of the genital
-organs, which as we have already seen forms a real
-disease.</p>
-
-<p>The most efficient way to arrest the evil caused by
-these abuses, is to stop them. When this is done,
-order is established very rapidly. Hence the preservative
-means are in our view better than any remedial
-measures. Often however, when these excesses
-have been frequently repeated and long continued, the
-genital organs continue without provocation the work
-which was commenced by onanism. Thus <i>involuntary
-pollutions</i> keep up and increase a degree of exhaustion
-and other complaints which would otherwise
-disappear. In this case the treatment to be followed
-is to arrest the pollutions. These generally result, as
-we have said, from an inflammation of the seminal
-passages analogous to that existing in the urethra in
-blenorrhœa. This fact has lately been demonstrated
-anatomically by Lallemand and M. Davila. Hence
-the treatment of involuntary spermatorrhœa resembles
-in many respects that of chronic catarrh. The
-following are the principal remedies to be employed.</p>
-
-<p>First must be placed cold applications to the genital
-organs; of these pure water and ice are more generally
-and successfully employed. In using these, Coelius
-Aurelian employed sponges. Wichmann wet
-cloths, and Ste. Marie, who preferred ice, used a bladder.
-Cold washes and affusions to the part and cold
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_236">236</span>
-douches to the perineum, and hipbaths and seabaths
-have also been used. Lallemand who repudiates
-enemata too hot or warm thinks that those which are
-cold may be useful. Sulphurous baths have likewise
-been employed by Lallemand, in the manner described
-in his work in diseases of the genito-urinary organs.
-Davila in his thesis relates instances cured in this
-mode, and also the case of a young man who was
-cured of a diurnal pollution by introducing into the
-urethra a sound, which was retained there as long as
-the patient could bear it. Lallemand entertains the
-same opinion, and has also employed acupuncture
-and he says with success. He has known patients
-who after the application of needles between the posterior
-parts of the bursœ and the anus, have passed
-three or four months without pollutions.</p>
-
-<p>Some practitioners have succeeded by directing
-their remedies to the cerebellum and the spinal marrow.</p>
-
-<p>Many medicines have been administered internally
-for losses of semen. Those most in repute are the
-preparations of iron and quinine, either separately or
-together. Ferruginous waters, particularly those of
-Spa, and the oxides of iron, have often been used.
-Wichmann recommends several glasses of Spa water
-every morning combined with some preparation of
-cinchona: Serrurier has related a case showing the
-efficacy of this treatment. Lallemand thinks that
-cinchona and generally all remedies which contain
-tannin, only benefit temporarily. Many authors also
-disapprove of the use of astringents and tonics in
-spermatorrhœa, attributing to them among other inconveniences,
-that of causing constipation.</p>
-
-<p>Many narcotic substances have also been used.
-We have related a case where thridace has succeeded.
-Belladonna also might be useful. In a patient
-mentioned by Serrurier, opium seems to have exasperated
-the complaint. Davila however thinks that
-opiates have been prescribed with success: but he
-dreads the constipation which they generally cause.
-Other remedies as the mineral acids, phosphoric
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_237">237</span>
-lemonade, lime water, some preparations of lead,
-magnesia, ipecac, &amp;c. have been used. Might not advantage
-be derived from the use of balsam copaiva
-and pulverized cubebs in some cases of spermatorrhœa.</p>
-
-<p>We have already made some remarks on regimen,
-when speaking of the mode of avoiding or calming the
-venereal sense, and our rules for restoring individuals
-exhausted by onanism, will be stated hereafter.</p>
-
-<p>The object of the treatment stated is to remedy the
-disease, caused by the loss of semen. A mode has
-been proposed by Wender to prevent this physically;
-this consists in the compression of the canal of the
-urethra: it is accomplished by means of a pair of forceps
-made of flexible wood, six to seven inches long,
-and from twelve to eighteen lines thick. This forceps
-is used by passing the penis between its two branches,
-one being above, and the other below; the two extremities
-are then tied with a cord. In this manner
-the penis is compressed and slightly confined; which
-is sufficient, says Wender, to remove all voluptuous
-sensation from this part, and to arrest the pollution.
-He has given the details of a case obtained by these
-means, and by the proper administration of tonics.</p>
-
-<p>Wender’s forceps may have several inconveniences,
-and may frequently fail of the proposed end. But has
-it not been too much ridiculed, and is it not susceptible
-of improvement? Serrurier thinks that the idea may
-be turned to advantage, and Reveill&eacute; Pariset assures
-us that he has used it twice in cases of pollution, and
-with success. (<i>Revue. Med.</i>, <i>April</i>, 1828, p. 94.)</p>
-
-<p>Having mentioned the course to pursue in order to
-reach the seat of the disease, that is, the voluntary and
-involuntary pollutions, let us now speak of their effects.
-One of two things must happen; either these
-pollutions pursue their work, or finally the economy
-becomes insensible to their action. The first supposition
-is that least favorable to success: the physician
-prescribes for effects while the cause continues to act;
-he <i>doctors</i>, as it is called, for symptoms; and it is the
-same as if one should attempt to cure gastritis or pleuritis,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_238">238</span>
-without attending to the pleura or stomach. This,
-however, is no reason for abstaining completely from
-treatment. We may also sometimes retard the progress
-of the disease, or calm any painful and disquieting
-symptom. The physician has a much better prospect
-of success, when there is no longer a habit to destroy
-the health, and when no pollutions occur. We shall
-not attempt in this place to give the treatment proper
-for the different diseases which may be produced by
-onanism. Myelitis, dementia, amaurosis, epilepsy,
-&amp;c., &amp;c., whether caused by onanism or not, require
-special remedies, which are stated in works which
-treat of these affections. We would remark, however,
-that when these diseases are caused by onanism, it is
-perfectly futile for the physician to attempt to treat the
-disease, unless the habit of self pollution be arrested.
-In this place we will only mention that consumption,
-that exhaustion, in fact, that deterioration, which we
-have described in the third chapter of our first part.</p>
-
-<p>Onanistic deterioration presents two very distinct
-phenomena: 1st, the consumption of the strength; 2d,
-the excitement of the senses. Thus, then, to restore
-the strength without increasing, and even, if possible,
-to diminish the general disposition to receive impressions,
-are the two indications to be fulfilled.</p>
-
-<p>But before commencing, it is well to remember that
-this cannot be done in a few days. A disease which
-is gradual in its appearance is removed in the same
-manner. The physician who would attempt to hurry
-it by employing active remedies, would soon exhaust
-the system.</p>
-
-<p>The best mode of reparation is found in diet: the
-body must be recruited by food, and inasmuch as only
-those things are nutritious which are digested, the first
-rule to be observed is, that all the conditions of good
-digestion are properly observed. Inasmuch as these
-conditions present nothing special in respect to onanists,
-we shall be very brief, referring to our previous
-remarks on this subject. It must first be considered,
-that in patients accustomed to onanism the digestive
-functions are always deranged, or are liable to be so.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_239">239</span></p>
-
-<p>The slightest error in diet may aggravate this state
-considerably; which is, in itself, an evil, and may add
-to the trouble of cure. Hence, if the rules of a good
-regimen should always be vigorously observed, this
-necessity is still more imperious when patients indulge
-in onanism.</p>
-
-<p>Every article of food which is difficult to digest
-should be forbidden, and among articles which can be
-digested, those should be selected which contain the
-most nourishment, and are the least exciting. Thus
-condiments, which are but slightly nutritious, and are
-very exciting, ought never to be used, unless they are
-indispensably necessary to digestion, and then only in
-very small quantities. Milk is very nutritious, and
-does not excite; it should therefore be preferred by all
-those who are exhausted. If cow’s milk be found difficult
-of digestion, asses’ milk and that of woman has
-been recommended. But if this article be difficult of
-digestion, it should be prohibited, for then it is injurious.
-The flesh of young animals, particularly veal
-and poultry, is good; but beef and mutton is still better,
-for they contain more nutritious matter in a smaller
-compass. These articles, when roasted or broiled, are
-better than when boiled. Fresh fish is generally a
-suitable article of food: we allude to those kinds which
-are easily digested, as shad, perch, &amp;c. Soups, especially
-those of beef, turtle, and the different broths,
-should always, in order to be digested, be mingled with
-solid articles of food, and should even take their place,
-if these latter cannot be digested.</p>
-
-<p>Farinaceous substances, and especially bread, rice,
-potatoe, &amp;c., are very suitable, because they are nutritious,
-and but slightly stimulant; but they are often
-bad to digest.</p>
-
-<p>The rule <i>little and often</i>, is the rule to follow, in
-regard to the division of food. The patient has always
-taken too much food: if he feels perfectly satisfied, or
-if he experiences any inconvenience after it, the quantity
-of nourishment should be so regulated that nothing
-of this kind could occur. The meals should be taken
-frequently, only because they are small. We prefer to
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_240">240</span>
-give broth warm, or more frequently still, cold, by
-spoonfuls, and have seen a benefit from it.</p>
-
-<p>Drinks are not very nutritious, and generally stimulate
-much. Those which are given to strengthen, only
-do so for a few moments. They excite, and do not
-nourish. If the patient takes them to quench thirst,
-he should take as little as possible, for they also must
-be digested. In this respect wines may be useful. To
-choose among them, the experience of the patient must
-be consulted. A general rule governs the use of drinks
-at meals, viz.: to attain the proposed end with the
-smallest quantity of drink. Very dry wines, liquors,
-coffee, tea, &amp;c., ought not to be permitted, unless absolutely
-necessary to digestion. The use of Selzer water,
-and particularly of Spa water, may be very advantageous.
-Very cold drinks are often the only ones suitable
-to the stomach.</p>
-
-<p>Medicines have often been administered, either to
-strengthen the system, or to re-establish the digestive
-powers. Of these, the most useful are preparations of
-iron, quinine, and bitters. It is possible to improve the
-digestive organs with these drugs, and also with others;
-but this is not the place to give the treatment of diseases
-which are marked by difficulty of digestion. I
-know that some tonics may be used with great advantage,
-especially if they are given in such doses as to
-have no direct and immediate effect, particularly if
-their local action on the stomach and intestines be not
-too powerful.</p>
-
-<p>Very cold baths, like every remedy capable of having
-an intense effect, should be forbidden to patients
-exhausted by onanism. But if the baths are simply
-cold, and particularly if they are taken in running
-water, or in the sea, they may strengthen the constitution.
-Dry, or aromatic frictions on the limbs, or along
-the vertebral column, are useful. The exercise should
-be moderate exercise, for too much fatigue exhausts
-the strength, instead of increasing it, and might excite
-or hasten the development of one of the diseases produced
-by onanism. A pure and dry air, like that
-breathed in hilly countries, may also have a favorable
-influence on the economy generally, or on digestion.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_241">241</span></p>
-
-<h2 id="APPENDIX">APPENDIX.</h2>
-
-<p>The preceding pages may seem to many of our
-readers more particularly adapted to France; and it
-may be presumed that onanism is not so frequent in
-America. This however is a mistake: an able writer
-in that valuable periodical, the Boston Med. and
-Surg. Journal, when treating on the subject remarks
-as follows:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“The pernicious and debasing practice of <span class="smcap">Masturbation</span>
-is a more common and extensive evil with
-youth of both sexes, than is usually supposed. The
-influence of this habit upon both mind and body, severe
-as it has been considered, and greatly as it has
-been deprecated, is altogether more prejudicial than
-the public, and, as is believed, even the medical profession,
-are aware.</p>
-
-<p>“A great number of the evils which come upon the
-young at and after the age of puberty, arise from <i>masturbation</i>,
-persisted in, so as to waste the vital energies
-and enervate the physical and mental powers of
-man. Not less does it sap the foundation of moral
-principles, and blast the first budding of manly and
-honorable feelings which were exhibiting themselves
-in the opening character of the young.</p>
-
-<p>“Many of the weaknesses commonly attributed to
-growth and the changes in the habit by the important
-transformation from adolescence to manhood, are justly
-referable to this practice.</p>
-
-<p>“This change requires all the energy of the system,
-greatly increased as it is at this period of life, which
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_242">242</span>
-if undisturbed will bring about a vigorous and healthy
-condition of both the mental and physical powers.</p>
-
-<p>“If masturbation be commenced at this period, it
-cannot fail to interrupt essentially this important process;
-and if continued, will inevitably impress imbecility
-on the constitution, not less apparent in the
-body than the mind, preventing, as it will not fail to
-do, the full development of the powers of both.</p>
-
-<p>“The individual becomes feeble, is unable to labor
-with accustomed vigor, or to apply his mind to study;
-his step is tardy and weak, he is dull, irresolute, engages
-in his sports with less energy than usual, and
-avoids social intercourse; when at rest he instinctively
-assumes a lolling or recumbent posture, and if at
-labor or at his games takes every opportunity to lie
-down or sit in a bent and curved position. The cause
-of these infirmities is <i>often</i> unknown to the subject
-of them, and <i>more generally</i> to the friends; and to
-labor, or study, or growth, is attributed all the evils
-which arise from the practice of this secret vice,
-which if persisted in will hardly fail to result in irremediable
-disease or hopeless idiocy. The natural
-consequence of indulgence in this, as in most other
-vices, is an increased propensity to them. This is
-particularly true of masturbation. In my intercourse
-with this unfortunate class of individuals, I have
-found a large proportion of them wholly ignorant of
-the causes of their complaints, and if not too far gone
-the abandonment of the habit has, after awhile, removed
-all the symptoms and resulted in confirmed
-health.</p>
-
-<p>“One young man, now under my care, was first
-arrested in his career by reading the chapters on the
-subject in the Young Man’s Guide. For many
-months, he has totally abstained from the practice,
-and yet he is feeble, depressed, irresolute, and unable
-to fix his attention to any subject, or to pursue any
-active employment. But he is steadily convalescing,
-and will doubtless recover.</p>
-
-<p>“If the symptoms above enumerated do not lead in
-any way to a discontinuance of the habit, other symptoms
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_243">243</span>
-more formidable, and more difficult of cure, will
-present themselves. The back becomes lame and
-weak, the limbs tremble, the digestion is disturbed,
-and costiveness or diarrhœa, or an alternation of them,
-take place. The head becomes painful&mdash;the heart
-palpitates&mdash;the respiration is easily hurried&mdash;the mind
-is depressed and gloomy&mdash;the temper becomes irritable&mdash;the
-sleep disturbed, and is attended by lascivious
-dreams, and not unfrequently nocturnal pollutions.
-With these symptoms the pulse becomes small, the
-extremities cold and damp; the countenance is downcast,
-the eye without natural lustre; shamefacedness
-is apparent, as if the unfortunate victim was conscious
-of his degraded condition.</p>
-
-<p>“The stomach often rejects food, and is affected
-with acidity, and loathing; the nervous system becomes
-highly irritable; neuralgia, tabes dorsalis, pulmonary
-consumption, or fatal marasmus, terminate
-the suffering, or else insanity and deplorable idiocy
-are the fatal result. Long before such an event, the
-mind is enfeebled, the memory impaired, and the
-power of fixing the attention wholly lost. These are
-symptoms which should awaken our attention to the
-danger of the case, and which should induce us to
-sound the alarm, and if possible arrest the victim from
-the inevitable consequences of persisting in the habit.</p>
-
-<p>“In females, leucorrhœa is often induced by masturbation,
-and I doubt not incontinence of urine, stranguary,
-prolapsus uteri, disease of the clitoris, and
-many other diseases, both local and general, which
-have been attributed to other causes.</p>
-
-<p>“It is often difficult to obtain information on the
-subject of masturbation. Where it is suspected by
-the physician, the friends are wholly ignorant on the
-subject, and the individual, suffering, is not ready to
-acknowledge a practice which he is conscious is filthy
-in the extreme, although he may have had no suspicions
-of its deleterious influence upon his health.</p>
-
-<p>“It is not sufficient that we know the consequences
-of masturbation, for these are often irremediable disease;
-we ought to know the symptoms of its commencement,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_244">244</span>
-of the incipient stages of those diseases
-which result from it, as well as the influence which
-the moderate practice of it will have upon the physical
-and mental stamina of the man&mdash;for it is not too
-much to say that the practice cannot be followed by
-either sex, even in a moderate way, without injury,
-especially by the young.</p>
-
-<p>“Nature designs that this drain upon the system
-should be reserved to mature age, and even then that
-it be made but sparingly. Sturdy manhood, in all
-its vigor, loses its energy and bends under the too frequent
-expenditure of this important secretion; and
-no age or condition will protect a man from the danger
-of unlimited indulgence, legally and naturally exercised.</p>
-
-<p>“In the young, however, its influence is much more
-seriously felt; and even those who have indulged so
-cautiously as not to break down the health or the
-mind, cannot know how much their physical energy,
-mental vigor, or moral purity, have been affected by
-the indulgence.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Nothing short of total abstinence can save those
-who have become the victims of it.</i> In this indulgence,
-no half way course will ever subdue the disease,
-or remove the effect of the habit from the system.
-Total abstinence is the only remedy. If the
-constitution is not fatally impaired&mdash;if organic disease
-has not taken place, this remedy will prove effectual,
-and must be adopted, especially in all cases in
-which the effects are visible, or the consequences cannot
-fail to be ultimately fatal.</p>
-
-<p>“This means of cure may be seconded by others,
-which may be found necessary to remove the effects
-upon the physical system. Suffice it to remark here,
-that total abstinence, in an aggravated form of masturbation,
-is not easily effected. Slight irritation will
-produce an expenditure of the secretion quite involuntary,
-and spontaneous emissions and nocturnal pollution
-may for a long time prolong the danger, and
-prevent that renovation of the powers which would
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_245">245</span>
-otherwise be the result of the good resolution of the
-victim of the habit.</p>
-
-<p>“No cause is more influential in producing insanity,
-and, in a special manner, perpetuating the disease,
-than masturbation. The records of the institutions
-give an appalling catalogue of cases attributed to this
-cause; and yet such records do not show nearly all the
-cases which are justly ascribable to it. For it is so
-obscure, and so secret in its operation, that the friends
-in almost all cases are wholly ignorant of it. It is in
-a few cases only, where the practice of the vice becomes
-shamefully notorious, that friends are willing to
-allow its agency in the production of any disease, particularly
-insanity; and yet no cause operates more directly
-upon the mind and the feeling. The mental
-energies are prostrated by the habit in innumerable
-cases, long before the delusions of insanity appear.
-Indeed there are many cases, in which insanity does
-not intervene between the incipient stages of that
-mental and physical imbecility, which comes early
-upon the victim of masturbation, and the most deplorable
-and hopeless idiocy, in which it frequently results.</p>
-
-<p>“This is perhaps peculiar to this cause of idiocy. I
-know of no other which does not produce the ravings
-and illusions of insanity, or the gloomy musings, agitations
-and alarms of melancholy, before the mind is
-lost in idiotism. But the victim of masturbation passes
-from one degree of imbecility to another, till all the
-powers of the system, mental, physical and moral, are
-blotted out forever!</p>
-
-<p>“This is not, however, always the case. In some individuals
-there is all the raving of the most furious
-mania, or the deep and cruel torture of hapless melancholy,
-before the mind is obliterated and the energies
-of the system forever prostrated.</p>
-
-<p>“There are other circumstances attending the insanity
-from masturbation, which render this the most distressing
-form of mental disease. I allude to the difficulty
-of breaking up the habit while laboring under this
-malady. When insanity is once produced by it, it is
-nearly hopeless, because the cause of disease is redoubled
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_246">246</span>
-and generally perpetuated. The libidinous
-desires are greatly increased, and the influence of self
-restraint cannot be brought sufficiently into action to
-prevent the constant, daily, and I might say almost
-hourly recurrence of the practice. Thus the cause is
-perpetuated; and in spite of every effort, the disease
-increases, the powers of body and mind fail together,
-and are lost in the most deplorable, hopeless, disgusting
-fatuity! And yet the practice is not abandoned.
-All the remaining energies of animal life seem to be
-concentrated in these organs, and all the remaining
-power of gratification left is in the exercise of this no
-longer secret, but loathsome and beastly habit.</p>
-
-<p>“Those cases of insanity arising from other known
-causes, in which masturbation is a symptom, are rendered
-more hopeless by this circumstance. It is a
-counteracting influence to all the means of cure employed,
-either moral or medicinal, and coinciding as it
-does with whatever other causes may have had an
-agency in producing disease, renders the case almost
-hopeless. Of the number of the insane that have
-come under the observation of the writer (and that
-number is not small,) few, very few have recovered,
-who have been in the habit of this evil practice; and
-still fewer, I might say almost none, have recovered,
-in which insanity or idiocy has followed the train of
-symptoms enumerated in a former paper, indicating
-the presence of the habit, and its debilitating influence
-upon the minds and bodies of the young.</p>
-
-<p>“Most of the cases of insanity from this cause commence
-early in life; even confirmed and hopeless
-idiocy has been the melancholy consequence, before
-the victim had reached his twentieth year.</p>
-
-<p>“Of eighty males, insane, that have come under the
-observation of the writer, and who have been particularly
-examined and watched, with reference to ascertaining
-the proportion that practised masturbation,
-something more than a quarter were found to practise
-it; and in about 10 per cent., a large proportion of
-which are idiotic, the disease is supposed to have
-arisen from this cause.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_247">247</span></p>
-
-<p>“Would it be believed, if it should be said that the
-proportion will not vary essentially in the other sex?
-On a former occasion I observed that the absolute
-abandonment of the practice, even in those whose
-minds were unaffected by insanity, was not always
-easily effected. If no <i>voluntary</i> practice is continued,
-the habit may be so far established, and the susceptibility
-to the complaint be so great, that slight irritation
-will produce it, and that often for a long time after the
-danger is fully appreciated, and the victory over the
-propensity achieved so far as cautiously avoiding
-known and intentional indulgence. Nocturnal pollution
-and involuntary emissions come from slight causes
-and trifling irritation, but perpetuate for a long time all
-the train of unhappy influences that have been heretofore
-detailed. The unfortunate subject of this detestable
-vice, whose mental energy is unimpaired, and
-whose moral feelings are susceptible of impression,
-can be persuaded to abandon it, if the danger is set
-before him in its true light; but hundreds can bear me
-testimony that the effects of it are long felt, and the
-involuntary excitement produced by dreams, lascivious
-companions, warm beds, and improper intercourse with
-corrupt society, has for a long time after had its influence
-in retarding complete recovery to health. With
-the insane we can have no such hopes, and no such
-prospects of cure. They will rarely form resolutions
-on the subject, and still more rarely adhere to them.
-Reason, the balance wheel of the mind, being denied
-them, they are obnoxious to the influence of all the
-propensities in a high degree.</p>
-
-<p>“After the practice of masturbation, as a voluntary
-habit, is entirely suspended, long and persevering efforts
-will be required to remove the effects from the
-system, and restore it to vigor and soundness. The
-individual himself must exercise great self-denial, and
-resolve to persevere with the means and overcome all
-obstacles that may be in his way, however formidable
-and difficult. The regimen to be adopted must be
-strictly adhered to on all occasions. As the inebriate
-would probably never conquer his appetite for alcoholic
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_248">248</span>
-drink if he indulged once a month only&mdash;so in this
-habit, the occasional indulgence will thwart the whole
-plan of cure. The diet should be simple and nutritious;
-the exercise should be moderate and gentle; indulgence
-in bed should not be allowed, and the individual
-should always sleep alone. A mattress is better
-than a soft bed. He should rise immediately upon
-waking, and never retire till the disposition to sleep
-comes strongly upon him. The cold bath is a valuable
-remedy; a sea bath is better, and the shower bath
-often superior to either.</p>
-
-<p>“Narcotics, if there is a high degree of irritability in
-the system, are valuable remedies, of which conium,
-belladonna, hyoscyamus, nux vomica, and opium, may
-be used under different circumstances, combined or
-singly, according to the effects. Blisters and issues
-on the pudenda or perineum, promise well, and the
-different preparations of bark and iron, and other mineral
-tonics, should be used till all the effects of the
-habit are removed, till the propensity is fully conquered,
-and the constitution is restored to health and vigor.”</p>
-
-<p>Among the cases which occurred in the practice of
-this gentleman, are the following:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“A respectable young gentleman, of one of the
-learned professions, was out of health for a long period;
-his head and eyes suffered exceedingly, and he
-was in a state little short of insanity. He placed himself
-under the care of one of the most eminent men in
-the metropolis, and followed his prescriptions a year,
-but without benefit. He then called upon another,
-who asked him whether he was addicted to masturbation,
-to which he answered in the affirmative. The
-advice given him was principally to abstain from the
-indulgence, and his health gradually improved, and is
-now re-established.</p>
-
-<p>“B. D., aged 20, had had ill health for a year or
-more; he was pale, feeble, nervous&mdash;lost his resolution&mdash;had
-no appetite&mdash;took to his bed most of the time,
-and became dull, almost speechless, and wholly abstracted
-and melancholy. His brother was his physician;
-but not ascertaining the cause of his symptoms,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_249">249</span>
-he gained no advantage over the disease, and the unhappy
-young man was constantly losing strength and
-flesh. After a while he came under the care of the
-writer. He was in the most miserable condition conceivable;
-emaciated, feeble, pallid&mdash;had night sweats,
-diarrhœa, or costiveness, total loathing of all food; his
-heart beat, his head was painful, and he felt no desire,
-and would make no effort, to live. Suspecting masturbation,
-I found, upon strict inquiry and watching,
-that my suspicions were well founded. I pointed out
-the danger of the practice, assured him that it was the
-cause of all his sufferings, and that he might be restored
-to usefulness and health again if he would
-strictly adhere to the course prescribed for him. He
-took bark and iron alternately for a long time, pursued
-a course of gentle exercise and invigorating diet, and
-gave up at once the vicious indulgence. After a long
-time he wholly recovered, and is now a healthy and
-valuable citizen.</p>
-
-<p>“P. W., aged 27, called for advice in the summer of
-1834, having had ill health for some eighteen months
-or two years. He complained of confusion of the head
-and pain in the eyes, indigestion, palpitation of the
-heart, and difficulty of respiration. His sleep was disturbed,
-his temper irritable, and he felt dissatisfied with
-himself, and greatly inclined to gloom and melancholy.
-He complained of listlessness and indisposition to any
-bodily efforts, and of inability to fix his mind upon any
-subject, or give his attention to any business. His
-hands were cold, countenance pale and dejected, pulse
-frequent, and his whole system in a state of great irritation.
-It was ascertained that for two or three years
-he had been in the daily habit of masturbation. For
-eight or nine months last past, he has discontinued it;
-he is, however, occasionally subject to nocturnal emission,
-which has thus far interfered with his recovery;
-but he is better, and under the use of tonic remedies,
-exercise and generous diet, feels confident of recovery,
-having regained his spirits and appetite.</p>
-
-<p>“H. F., aged 20, was for a long time in the habit of
-masturbation. He was for years confined to the house,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_250">250</span>
-and much of the time to his bed. By long indulgence
-the habit had become irresistible, and the consequences
-truly deplorable. His mind was as fickle and capricious
-as that of an infant, and his health was wholly
-prostrated. For five or six years he was the most
-wretched being imaginable. Nocturnal pollutions,
-spontaneous emission, and all the evils resulting from
-unrestrained indulgence, were presented in this truly
-unhappy young man. He had been apprized of the
-danger which the continued practice would bring upon
-him, and was sensible that all his trials had their origin
-in this vice; and yet the propensity had become
-so strong that he could not resist it, and if he did, the
-consequences had become such that little benefit was
-derived from his good resolution. In his intercourse
-with his friends he was covered with shame and confusion,
-and seemed to feel conscious that every individual
-that he met with knew, as well as himself, the
-height and the depth of his degradation. In this condition,
-in a fit of desperation, he attempted to emasculate
-himself, but succeeded in removing one testicle
-only. After he recovered from the dangerous wound
-which he inflicted, he began to get better, and after two
-years he recovered his health and spirits. He has
-since, at the age of 45, <i>married</i> a very clever woman,
-and they live in peace and harmony.</p>
-
-<p>H. &mdash;&mdash;, a young man 20 years of age, had been
-feeble and dejected for two years. He was pale, torpid,
-irresolute, and shamefaced in the extreme&mdash;so
-much so, that I could not catch his eye during a sitting
-of an hour. He complained of his head, of short
-breathing and palpitation of the heart, and of extreme
-debility. His extremities were cold and damp, his
-muscular system remarkably flabby, and his snail-like
-motions evinced great loss of muscular strength. His
-father, who accompanied the young man, said that he
-had consulted many physicians without benefit. The
-moment that he came into my room I was strongly impressed
-that he was the victim of this solitary vice. I
-questioned him sometime without ascertaining the
-cause of disease. His father was wholly ignorant, and
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_251">251</span>
-the physicians had not suspected it, or inquired concerning
-it. I requested a private interview&mdash;told him
-the danger of such habits, the importance of ascertaining
-the true cause of disease, and my suspicions
-that he was in this habit, and that if so, he would soon
-fall a victim to its influence. He then acknowledged
-that he was in the daily practice of masturbation, and
-had been for three years&mdash;that he often also had spontaneous
-emission, &amp;c. He had never suspected that
-it had any influence upon his health.</p>
-
-<p>“The symptoms which follow masturbation, viz.
-nocturnal pollution and spontaneous emission, often
-continue after the victim of the vice is made sensible
-of the danger of voluntary indulgence. These require
-distinct and separate consideration. In some cases
-they become very obstinate; and in spite of every effort,
-continue to make such a waste of vital energies
-as to prevent a recovery of the health&mdash;and the new
-form of disease continuing, the same fatal results follow
-which take place from a continuance of the habit.
-The local irritability of the organs of generation often
-become so great, that the ordinary evacuations of the
-bowels and the bladder produce an emission; and even
-lascivious ideas, riding on horseback, or other equally
-slight irritation, has the same effect. Such cases require
-the utmost care, to afford any chance of recovery.</p>
-
-<p>“In addition to the common remedies prescribed for
-the effects of masturbation&mdash;as bark, iron, silver, the
-cold bath and shower bath, &amp;c., which are valuable
-remedies for this local, as well as for the general debility
-attending the habit&mdash;other remedies, of a more
-stimulating character, and that have a more direct local
-effect upon these organs, are also indicated. Of these,
-tincture of lytta, bals. copaiva, and nitrate of silver,
-may be named. The strong tinct. of lytta, (made of
-pulv. lytta, 10 oz. alcohol, lbj.) may be taken in doses
-of from 10 to 20 drops, increasing, so as to produce a
-slight irritation of the urethra, and continued in such
-doses as will keep up this effect without occasioning
-actual pain. The dose should be repeated three or
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_252">252</span>
-four times a day, generally. The very best effects
-often result from the use of this remedy.</p>
-
-<p>“Balsam of copaiva, if the urethra is irritable, may
-be a valuable remedy. Nitrate of silver is also both
-useful as a general remedy, and as having some local
-action on these organs. From one to four grains may
-be taken daily, combined with a little opium, to prevent
-irritation of the stomach and bowels.</p>
-
-<p>“In leucorrhœa, which too frequently arises from
-this cause, these remedies promise much; and when
-prescribed in efficient doses, often effect a cure, whatever
-may have been the cause of the disease. It is
-not too much to say, that no one cause more frequently
-affects the health of females, and lays the foundation
-of fatal disease, than severe and long continued leucorrhœa;
-and yet, if attended to early, it is easily
-cured. It ought, however, even if slight, never to be
-neglected.”</p>
-
-<p>Many cases similar in character to those already
-stated, and confirming the foregoing observations, have
-been transmitted to us by Dr. A. Sidney Doane, and
-Prof. J. W. Francis, both of New York. Our limits,
-however, forbid their insertion.</p>
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-
-<h2 id="FOOTNOTES">FOOTNOTES:</h2>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1" href="#FNanchor_1" class="label">1</a>
- The injection into the rectum of a strong decoction of
-pomegranate root will destroy these ascarides. These injections
-should be repeated noon and night, and in five or six
-days the end is attained. Should these animals be found in the
-vagina, the same decoction should be used.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_2" href="#FNanchor_2" class="label">2</a>
- This learned work is dedicated to the Bishop of Lubeck, and
-has this motto:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry"><div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“Delicias pariunt veneri audelia flagra<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Dum nocet, illa juvat: dum juvet, ecce nocet.”<br /></span>
-</div></div></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="transnote">
-
-<h3>Transcriber’s Note:</h3>
-
-<p>Renumbered sections to match “Table of Contents”, reformatted section headers for consistency.</p>
-
-<p>Page 50, Changed “CHAPTER II” to read “CHAPTER III”.</p>
-
-<p>Page 133, Changed unattested word “prepatialis” to read “praeputialis”.</p>
-
-<p>Page 200, Changed two instances of unattested word “crysorchides” to
-read “cryptorchides”.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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-Onanism, Masturbation, Self-Pollution,, by Léopold Deslandes
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