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Ellis, Havelock, 1859-1939

"The Evolution of Modesty; The Phenomena of Sexual Periodicity; Auto-Erotism"

He cannot but observe
to himself: 'This woman is not dead; she breathes and is warm;
she does not look ill; she is plump and rosy.' He speaks to her;
she neither hears (apparently) nor responds. Her eyes are closed.
He touches, moves, and handles her at his pleasure. She makes no
resistance. What will this primitive Apollo do next? He will cure
the fit, and bring the woman back to consciousness, satisfy her
emotions, and restore her volition--not by delicate touches that
might be 'agonizing' to her hyperesthetic skin, but by vigorous
massage, passive motions, and succussion that would be painless.
The emotional process on the part of the woman would end,
perhaps, with mingled laughter, tears, and shame; and when
accused afterward of the part which the ancestrally acquired
properties of her nervous system had compelled her to act, as a
preliminary to the event, what woman would not deny it and be
angry? But the course of Nature having been followed, the natural
purpose of the hysterical paroxysm accomplished, there would
remain as a result of the treatment--instead of one discontented
woman--two happy people, and the possible beginning of a third."
"Natural, primary sexual hysteria in woman," King concludes, "is
a temporary modification of the nervous government of the body
and the distribution of nerve-force (occurring for the most part,
as we see it to-day, in prudish women of strong moral principle,
whose volition has disposed them to resist every sort of liberty
or approach from the other sex), consisting in a transient
abdication of the general, volitional, and self-preservational
ego, while the reins of government are temporarily assigned to
the usurping power of the reproductive ego, so that the
reproductive government overrules the government by volition, and
thus, as it were, forcibly compels the woman's organism to so
dispose itself, at a suitable time and place, as to allow,
invite, and secure the approach of the other sex, whether she
will or not, to the end that Nature's imperious demand for
reproduction shall be obeyed.


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