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The Marquis de Sade
by Mistress Michelle Peters
DONATIEN, Alphonse Francois, Conte de Sade (otherwise known as
the Marquis de Sade) is as misunderstood as the sexual practice
which bears his name, "Sadism." Described as a "libertine,
debaucher, pornographer and sadist" and "the greatest
incarnation of evil that has ever lived," he spent at least
half of his adult life in prisons and asylums in 18th century
France.
The Marquis de Sade is generally considered to be one of the
finest writers who touched pen to paper, but because he was
one of the first to describe the role of the dominant male
in a sexual relationship and was a firm believer in sexual
freedom (he scandalized Paris high-society by attending orgies
at most of the brothels there) he was hounded by the moral
guardians of the time. The fact is, that only three scandals
can be proven against him and they did not warrant the punishment
he eventually received.
Little is really known of the life of the Marquis de Sade that
can truly be called fact, so rampant were the rumors which
circulated around Paris at the time. We do know that he was
born in 1740. He attended the famous College de Louis Le Grand
and was eventually commissioned as a coronet in the French army.
It is with his marriage to the eldest daughter of one of the most
powerful magisterial families in France, Renee Pelagri de Montreuil,
that his problems in life really began.
He had married a refined, respectable woman of high rank and his
occasional graphic language and personal habits began to scandalize
the high society of the time. Only one month after his marriage he
is said to have had a great orgy at one of the Paris brothels. The
girls allegedly complained of "the brutalities and strange
phantasies" of the Marquis on this night. He is also supposed
to have "fed the company with chocolate pastilles made with
Spanish fly." This last might be true, but the rest was probably
concocted by his angry mother-in-law who swore to destroy de Sade for
besmirching the family name. As a result, de Sade was imprisoned on a
trumped up charge of poisoning the patrons and employees of the brothel.
It seems that throughout his youth and his years in the military,
young de Sade had been accustomed to zealously attending the local
brothels. In fact, the famous procuress Brissault is said to have
refused to furnish him with one of her girls because of his "unspeakable
actions" as she put it. The truth here is that de Sade made the
mistake of offending the Madame and was later the victim of her gossip.
The point is, the Marquis de Sade was just not able to make the adjustment
from this carousing life he was used to and the new life he was embarking
upon.
It seems that nothing can match the wrath of an angry mother-in-law,
as the Marquis was about to find out. After he was out of prison for
only one month he somehow became involved in a scandal with the
famous dancer and courtesan, Beauvoisin. It was rumored that he
had held a kind of mock court at Castle La Costa in Provence and
invited the townsfolk to orgies in Beauvoisin's honor. Not satisifed
with this, de Sade's venomous mother-in-law then concocted a story,
together with witnesses (and finally her own judge and jury) which
became known as the infamous "Keller affair."
According to this account, a young widow named Frau Keller was
upon the streets asking for alms when the Marquis de Sade happened
by. He took pity on her and suggested that she come to his home in
Arcveil and be his housekeeper. He allegedly took her through the
home showing her the duties of the house and all was in order until
they reached a dark room at the top of the house. From here, the
scholar Hardy (who claimed to have somehow witnessed this event)
picks up the commentary in his own words. "As soon as they
entered this room the Comte de Sade (a title he inherited after
his father's death) doubly bolted the door and ordered her to
denude herself completely.
Surprised and frightened, she refused. He drew out his sword
and threatened to run it through her if she offered any resistance.
But as he saw that these threats had no effect he suddenly threw
her upon the bed and violently tore off all her clothes with the
exception of her skirt, which he ordered her to take off. At her
failure to do this, he tore it off in strips, from her body. Then
he bound both her hands, placed a stick in her mouth so that she
could not cry out, brought forth two thick bundles of whips from
the chest and beat her soundly over the entire body.
"He then took from the cupboard a kind of pen-knife, a
candle and Spanish wax and made incisions in the fleshiest
parts of the body, carefully stretched each incision with
his two spread fingers so that he could the more easily pour
in the wax."
According to Hardy, the Marquis is then said to have locked
her in this room and threatened her with death. Although de
Sade was himself a gentleman and appears from his letters and
other writings to be of a most gentle nature, his wife's family
was somewhat more powerful than he was and this outlandish piece
of testimony sent him to prison again in 1772 or thereabouts. When
released, de Sade's hatred of his wife was so deep that he not
only seduced, but abducted his wife's sister, Anne Prospere from
a convent. He was seized in Piedmont and locked in the infamous
prison, the Bastille, only to be freed in 1789 during the French
revolution when the Bastille was set to the torch.
It was at this point in his life that de Sade came to his peak
in terms of his literary powers. He wrote the famous Justine:
ou, Les Malheurs de Ia Virtue at this time, as well as the first
book attempting -. to study and categorize sexual behavior in
human beings. It contained 600 different case studies and was
published over a century before Masters and Johnson were even
born! Among his writings were many political tracts, which called
not only for the abolition of capital punishment, but also for
equality of women, an idea not adopted in this country until over
a hundred years later.
It was one of these political pamphlets, however, which later got
de Sade into his most serious trouble. Not only did he speak out
in favor of a more civilized society, but he incurred the wrath
of Napoleon Bonaparte by writing against his iron hand. Although
the tract was totally political, it was spoken of as "obscene
denunciations" against Napoleon and his family. For the crime
of speaking his mind, the revolutionary de Sade was thrown into
prison for 3 years and later carted off to the insane asylum at
Chareton.
It was in this asylum that the creative genius of the Marquis
produced some of the greatest plays of the period. He not only
wrote them, but the inmates of the asylum (mostly political
heretics like himself) performed them to the dismay of the
hospital's director, Rover Collard who wrote in pleading terms,
"This man is not mentally ill... I firmly believe a strong
fort would be better fitted for him than an asylum with its many
opportunities for satisfying his degenerate desires." And
so it was with the Marquis de Sade. A literary genius, a
revolutionary thinker and an extreme advocate of sexual
freedom. Almost 200 years ahead of his time, he died on
December 8, 1814, in an asylum where he had no reason to
be. His tastes for a dominant role in his sexual life were
fogged by misunderstanding and political intrigues. And
today, nearly two centuries later, that fog is just
beginning to lift.
Mistress Michelle Peters
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