the object of her passion, succumbed, abandoned
her husband and children, and fled with him.
Six months later she was scarcely recognizable;
beauty, freshness and plumpness had taken the place
of emaciation; while the symptoms of consumption
and all other troubles had entirely disappeared.
A somewhat similar case is recorded by Camill
Lederer, of Vienna (Monatsschrift fuer Harnkrankheiten
und Sexuelle Hygiene, 1906, Heft 3). A widow,
a few months after her husband’s death,
began to cough, with symptoms of bronchial catarrh,
but no definite signs of lung disease. Treatment
and change of climate proved entirely unavailing
to effect a cure. Two years later, as no signs
of disease had appeared in the lungs, though the
symptoms continued, she married again. Within
a very few weeks all symptoms had disappeared,
and she was entirely fresh and well.
Numerous distinguished gynaecologists have recorded their belief that sexual excitement is a remedy for various disorders of the sexual system in women, and that abstinence is a cause of such disorders. Matthews Duncan said that sexual excitement is the only remedy for amenorrhoea; “the only emmenagogue medicine that I know of,” he wrote (Medical Times, Feb. 2, 1884), “is not to be found in the Pharmacopoeia: it is erotic excitement. Of the value of erotic excitement there is no doubt.” Anstie, in his work on Neuralgia, refers to the beneficial effect of sexual intercourse on dysmenorrhoea, remarking that the necessity of the full natural exercise of the sexual function is shown by the great improvement in such cases after marriage, and especially after childbirth. (It may be remarked that not all authorities find dysmenorrhoea benefited by marriage, and some consider that the disease is often thereby aggravated; see, e.g., Wythe Cook, American Journal Obstetrics, Dec., 1893.) The distinguished gynaecologist, Tilt, at a somewhat earlier date (On Uterine and Ovarian Inflammation, 1862, p. 309), insisted on the evil results of sexual abstinence in producing ovarian irritation, and perhaps subacute ovaritis, remarking that this was specially pronounced in young widows, and in prostitutes placed in penitentiaries. Intense desire, he pointed out, determines organic movements resembling those required for the gratification of the desire. These burning desires, which can only be quenched by their legitimate satisfaction, are still further heightened by the erotic influence of thoughts, books, pictures, music, which are often even more sexually stimulating than social intercourse with men, but the excitement thus produced is not relieved by that natural collapse which should follow a state of vital turgescence. After referring to the biological facts which show the effect of psychic influences on the formative powers of the ovario-uterine organs in animals, Tilt continues: “I may fairly infer that similar incitements on the mind of females may have