usually have more leisure to think of love. Women
are much more lascivious and amorous than men.”
This is the conclusion reached in a chapter devoted
to the question whether men or women are the more
amorous. In a subsequent chapter, dealing
with the question whether men or women receive more
pleasure from the sexual embrace, Venette concludes,
after admitting the great difficulty of the question,
that man’s pleasure is greater, but woman’s
lasts longer. (N. Venette, De la Generation
de l’Homme ou Tableau de l’Amour Conjugal,
Amsterdam, 1688.)
At a much earlier date, however, Montaigne had discussed this matter with his usual wisdom, and, while pointing out that men have imposed their own rule of life on women and their own ideals, and have demanded from them opposite and contradictory virtues,—a statement not yet antiquated,—he argues that women are incomparably more apt and more ardent in love than men are, and that in this matter they always know far more than men can teach them, for “it is a discipline that is born in their veins.” (Montaigne, Essais, book iii, chapter v.)
The old physiologists generally mentioned the appearance of sexual desire in girls as one of the normal signs of puberty. This may be seen in the numerous quotations brought together by Schurig, in his Parthenologia, cap. ii.
A long succession of distinguished physicians throughout the seventeenth century discussed at more or less length the relative amount of sexual desire in men and women, and the relative degree of their pleasure in coitus. It is remarkable that, although they usually attach great weight to the supposed opinion of Hippocrates in the opposite sense, most of them decide that both desire and pleasure are greater in women.
Plazzonus decides that women have more sources of pleasure in coitus than men because of the larger extent of surface excited; and if it were not so, he adds, women would not be induced to incur the pains and risks of pregnancy and childbirth. (Plazzonus, De Partibus Generationi Inservientibus, 1621, lib. ii, cap. xiii.)
“Without doubt,”
says Ferrand, “woman is more passionate than
man, and more often torn by
the evils of love.” (Ferrand, De la
Maladie d’Amour,
1623, chapter ii.)
Zacchia, mainly on a priori
grounds, concludes that women have
more pleasure in coitus than
men. (Zacchia, Quaestiones
Medico-legales, 1630,
lib. iii, quest, vii.)
Sinibaldus, discussing whether
men or women have more salacity,
decides in favor of women.
(J.B. Sinibaldus, Geneanthropeia,
1642, lib. ii, tract. ii,
cap. v.)