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They sub- scribe a million livres for the purpose of procuring a bevy of the most entrancing girls and boys and a retinue of the best cooks and servant-maids, all of whom, including their wives and daughters, they lock up in a remote and inaccessible castle amidst forests and mountains belonging to the duke in order to 63 n. De Sade aimed at vol. He who could set down in detail all the aberrations in this kind would perhaps be able to write one of the most beautiful!

What makes the book, in spite of a certain weird and satanic grandeur, more repulsive than any of his other produc- tions is the amount of space given to coprophily and copro- phagy.

De Sade has never been accused by his worst enemies of any inclination towards these complete perversions below, note ; on the contrary, he is known to have been rather fastidious in all his tastes. The persistent affection shown for himln all his adversities by both his wife and her sister would be incompre- hensible if he had been tainted with repulsive habits of this kind.

It must have been his boundless resentment and hatred of his enemies in the nobility above the rank of count and marquis there are no simple chevaliers or barons among the villains of his novels of priests from poor friars upwards to cardinals and for the moneyed financiers, which made him describe them as addicts of the vilest and most debased practices. On the other hand, it is equally true that de Sade was no more a murderer than he was a coprophile or coprophage. It would probably be true to say that he preserved his sanity and succeeded in resist- ing his murderous impulses by 'abreacting' them through pro- jection upon the imaginary villains of his novels.

The reader will remember that the most serene, urbane and benevolent of all poets in history, Goethe, Prime Minister of Saxony- Weimar, said with magnificent frankness that there was 'no crime of which he did not feel himself capable. He had, no doubt, inherited a double dose of original sin, but he yielded to the worst temptations of his tormented soul by spilling, not the blood of human victims, but harmless pots of ink on unfeeling notepaper.

It is not his notorious books that have been found in the hands of really murderous maniacs see below, Appendix IV and V, on the Book that inspired the mass- murderers Haigh and Unruh. What, finally, is the damage, if any, done by these notorious books, clandestinely circulated mostly among neuropaths domi- nated by the same dark atavist urges as their author and equally anxious to get imaginary relief for their passions rather than a terrible real satisfaction in the sufferings of their fellow-creatures, in comparison with, say, the Rev.

Sprenger's Malleus Male- ficarum, directly responsible for the torturing and burning as 'witches' of hundreds of innocent women and not a few men, not to speak of more respectable and deservedly praised books such as the Summa of St. XI, art. Meyer in the Allgemeine Deutsche Bio- graphic, suppl. In French there are: M.


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His first wife Aurelia Sacher-Masoch, nee Rumelin, published Die Damen im Pelz, Leipzig Morgenstern , , with a frontispiece photograph showing the author in her fur coat; Confessions de ma vie avec deux portraits, 4th ed. He was the son of the police- president Johann Nepomuk von Sacher, who had been knighted by the Emperor Francis I and had married Charlotte, a daughter of Prof. The name Sacher is derived from the Hebrew safoar 'hawk about', whence soher 'a hawker' or 'huckster', and there is no doubt that the family, although not mentioned in any Jewish reference work, was of Jewish origin.

The father's Christian name, Johann Nepomuk, and his rise to high office in Austria show that he was a convert to Roman Catholicism.

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Masoch is a Polish place- name, such as were often used by Jews as family names, and Prof, von Masoch may likewise have been of Jewish origin, although Sacher-Masoch used to claim that his mother belonged to the Polish gentry schlachta. This is possible but by no means certainly true. He also claimed an ancestor Matthias Sacher, who came, he alleged, with the Emperor Charles V to Ger- many, acquired a castle at Miihlberg and married a Marchcsa dementi. For this romantic story or family tradition there is no support whatever, but it may be true that he had Sephardi ancestors.

If they came from Spain to Germany with Charles V long after the expulsion of the Jews in they must have been marafios converses] , which is quite possible. He continued to study history at the University of Vienna and became an Archiv-Praktikant, or clerk in the State Archives. He is also said to have studied history under Prof. Schwind at the Jerman University of Prague. At the age of thirty he is said to have earned as a cavalry- officer of the reserve the Austrian medal for valour on the battlefield of Solferino Soon after the end of the war he started on his famous novel Don Juan von Kolomea, containing a sequence of colourful accounts of life inside and around the Jewish villages and towns of Galicia.

Having hawked the manu- script from one publisher to another, he at last got it printed in Wcstermann's Monatsheften, where it had an immediate, spectacular and not undeserved success. It criticized with audacity the institution of monogamous marriage, which, it alleged, forced husband and wife by inexorable necessity to deceive one another, children separating rather than uniting their parents.

Henceforth he was able to concentrate on a literary career and produced one successful novel after another: Eine Mondnacht; Die Kapitulanten; and then his best-known and most typical work, the Venus im Pelz 'Venus in the Fur' , the Love of Plato, and so forth. Most significant is his attempt to pre- sent a kind of philosophy of history or sociology in a book The Legacy of Cain Das Vermdchtnis Kairis, Stuttgart, with chapters on Love, Property, the State, War, Labour, Death, preceded by a prologue The Wanderer and followed by an epilogue Peace on Earth; also a book Die Aesthetik des Hdsslichen, Leipzig, , on the aesthetics of ugliness.

The success of these books, none of which is in the British Museum Library, was spectacular enough to provoke a real crusade against their in- fluence on the public, organized by two now-forgotten critics, Karl von Thaler and Otto Glagau. Twenty-four of his novels appeared in French in the respectable Revue des Deux Mondes. On his forty-seventh birthday in he received the Legion n.

Schlichtegroll says p. That the legends of the martyrs interested him more than any other literature ibid. He remembered dreaming, at the age of puberty, of being in the power of a cruel woman, a Sultana before whom he was kneeling in fetters a dream which holds no mystery for the modern psychoanalyst. He used to tell a story of how as a little boy he stayed in the house of an aunt Zenobia according to him a Countess X. Having hidden himself in a wardrobe in the lady's bedroom to be near her, he saw her come in, followed by a gentleman, with whom she went to bed, only to be disturbed by the irruption of the enraged husband, the frightened lover departing through the window, the jealous husband being set upon and his ears boxed by his charming wife.

Having betrayed his presence by an in- voluntary movement, the boy Leopold was dragged from his hiding-place and soundly thrashed by the adored Zenobia, wearing for the occasion the kazabaika, the fur-lined dressing- gown, henceforth associated inseparably with all his erotic imaginations. In Graz the young Dr.

But his great love was another married woman, Fanny von Pistor-Bogdanoff, at whose feet he is seen in a would-be romantic, but rather absurd photograph, showing her, of course, in the significant fur-lined kazabaika. By this lady he arranged to be constantly maltreated and humiliated. He went with her on long journeys by rail and road, paying all expenses, but dressed and acting as her liveried footman, until the lady got bored by this performance.

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While he lived in Graz he got acquainted with Wanda Rumelin, born , who became his first wife. His marriage was un- happy. Wanda relates p. As a child, she says, sJie had an ecstatic vision and went regularly to con- fession. She and her mother and sister earned some pin-money by making gloves. The photograph which displays her 'in the fur' does not show her exactly as a Venus, but she was probably once quite a good-looking girl, greatly flattered by the atten- tions of an infatuated young man who was not only a Hen von and a Hen Doktor, but also the author of two books to be seen in the windows of the local bookseller who had published them for the author.

She tells, rather pathetically op.

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She was more than perplexed to find that she was expected to consider her husband as her slave, to inflict upon him not only corporal punishment for any shortcomings of his as a lover, but also the tortures of jealousy by taking a paramour and committing adultery, not in secret, but brazenly flaunting in her husband's face her claims to complete matri- archal freedom and independence. It is not likely that he him- self understood the unconscious archetypal motives below, App. I of his behaviour.

The reader can easily imagine the bewilderment that a bride of petty-bourgeois origins, with no more than an elementary education received in a Roman Catholic convent school, must have felt her Confessions, p.

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There he used to organize nightly games of hide-and-seek in the park, at which all the 69 n. Whether his classical education had acquainted him with the fate of king Pentheus, the 'sufferer', at the hands of the Maenads clad in panther-skins below, note 1 08 in the Bacchae of Euripides quite unknown beyond doubt to poor Wanda or whether he acted under the impulse of unconscious archetypal motives the strange nocturnal panto- mime in which he played the helpless victim of the primeval fur-clad huntresses, the facts reveal the mental background of his passive algolagnia as clearly as De Sade's desire to live with bears above, p.

Go, note 2 the atavist motives of the latter's active cruelty. The most remarkable fact about Wanda who assumed, apparently at his suggestion, the Polish noble family-name Dunayew is that this half-educated young woman learnt so quickly possibly by engrossing clean copies of her husband's manuscripts and reading his proofs to produce successfully 'masochist' novels in competition with him Die Frauen im Pelz, Gcschichtcn von Wanda von Dunayew, Leipzig Morgenstern , 1 88 1, is the best known.

It is not likely that he enjoyed this emulation; anyhow, the marriage became more and more com- plicated and ended in a divorce. He espoused a second wife, one Hclene Meister, whose stolid common sense seems to have had a calming effect upon him, in spite of the interminable lawsuit with his first wife and others in which he became involved. He acquired an estate with a castle, tower and dungeon near Lind- heim in Hesse, where he lived the quiet life of a country squire and author until his death on 5 March I was with them and still remember quite clearly the man's face and general appearance.

So does Mr. Paul W. Emden, now living in Wimbledon, Surrey, whose father, a well- known banker of Frankfurt am Main, happened to be the executor of Sacher-Masoch's complicated will and had to cope with the lawsuits between his descendants by his two marriages, 70 NOTES n. The copyright of Sacher-Masoch's works has lapsed, and it would be well worth someone's while to produce an English version of the best of them.

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His bitterest enemy, Oswald 7immermann quoted by Schlichtegroll, op. His books were certainly reprinted again and again, until the real horrors of the First World War threw a shadow of oblivion on his sufferings and the imaginary ones of his tortured heroes. Geoffrey Gorer censures the impropriety of the psychia- trists who have immortalized his and de Sade's names by attach- ing them to the strange mental types represented by these two writers.