Sex and Sexuality in Georgian Britain
By Mike Rendell
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About this ebook
Peek beneath the bedsheets of eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century Britain in this affectionate, informative and fascinating look at sex and sexuality during the reigns of Georges I-IV. It examines the prevailing attitudes towards male and female sexual behavior, and the ways in which these attitudes were often determined by those in positions of power and authority. It also explores our ancestors’ ingenious, surprising, bizarre and often entertaining solutions to the challenges associated with maintaining a healthy sex life.
Did the people in Georgian Britain live up to their stereotypes when it came to sexual behavior? This book will answer this question, as well as looking at fashion, food, science, art, medicine, magic, literature, love, politics, faith and superstition through a new lens, leaving the reader enlightened and with a new regard for the ingenuity and character of our ancestors.
“This book was funny, at times, and for a slim volume is quite comprehensive . . . Good introduction to the period, very easy to read and entertaining.” —Rosie Writes . . .
Mike Rendell
Mike Rendell has written on a range of eighteenth-century topics, including a dozen books about the gentry, the age of piracy, and sexual scandals. Based in Dorset, UK, he also travels extensively giving talks on various aspects of the Georgian era.
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Sex and Sexuality in Georgian Britain - Mike Rendell
Preface
This book is intended to look at sex and sexuality in the period between 1714, when the first George came to the throne, and 1837, the accession of Queen Victoria. But of course, personal things such as sexual proclivities do not change merely because a different monarch sits on the throne, and it is sometimes helpful to look back at what happened in the 1600s to see how this shaped subsequent events. Besides, history is not so much a series of equally-weighted pendulum swings as a few tumultuous events followed by a series of aftershocks. That was certainly true of the previous century, which saw the execution of Charles I, the Commonwealth of Oliver Cromwell and the emergence of the Puritans, followed by the Restoration of the Monarchy. Things did not suddenly settle down after that and society felt the repercussions as conflicting pressures emerged: pressures from the church, pressures from the state, and economic pressures.
Fashionable contrasts. (You know what they say about men with big feet….)
Someone living in 1700 may well have been alive when poor Susan Bounty, a married woman from Bideford in Devon, was led to the gallows in 1654, the last person to be hanged for the ‘awful crime’ of adultery, after she had given birth to a child not fathered by her husband. That person may also have read the poems of the aristocrat John Wilmot, 2nd Earl of Rochester, who fearlessly mocked Charles II, ridiculed the court, committed blasphemy, and was dead, quite possibly from venereal disease, by the age of thirty-three. The observer from his or her viewpoint in 1700 would also have heard of the twenty-year-old Thomas Aikenhead, hanged for the offence of blasphemy in 1695. The point here is that the role of the State in determining what the individual could do, say or think was still being debated, and the debate was to dominate the Georgian era.
During the eighteenth century there were conflicting moves: some pulled in the direction of greater personal freedom of choice, while others sought to re-establish State control through censorship, using laws against sedition, libel and blasphemy. Theatres were banned from putting on plays unless they had been approved by the Lord Chamberlain. Plays critical of the government were unlikely to get their place under the spotlight of the stage and therefore works such as John Gay’s Polly, the follow-up to The Beggar’s Opera, were never performed.
Seditious libel had long been a concept under Common Law, and was used by the courts to punish anything deemed to be tending towards insurrection against the established order. Seditious libel and blasphemous libel were considered to be interchangeable descriptions of an offence which could be committed against the king, his government or the established church. It was a charge used against the poet Leigh Hunt as late as 1812 in retaliation for his rude comments about the Prince of Wales, calling him fat, oily and like a whale. And yet the existence of a law against seditious libel did not prevent Gillray, the doyen of satirists, from portraying the king and his family in the most disparaging and critical manner. Showing an image of the queen as a hideous old hag with bare breasts and with her hand covering the groin of the (naked) William Pitt, ‘Sin Death and the Devil’ implied that the wife of the monarch was having a sexual relationship with the prime minister. Yet no charges were brought against Gillray for this most scurrilous of prints.
It is easy to forget how nervous the House of Hanover must have felt throughout the eighteenth century. Not only did it have the example of regicide as a reminder from the previous century, but it also had to face the very real threat of a Jacobite Revolution, not just in 1715 and 1745, but with the general undercurrent of feeling against the nation’s rulers. How much more those royal nerves must have suffered when, towards the end of the century, the French Revolution showed the fragility with which the royal head rested upon royal shoulders.
Throughout the century there were moves to reduce the powers of both the monarchy and its government and allow greater individual freedom. Conversely, it led to men like the radical John Wilkes, editor of the influential publication North Briton, and a fervent supporter of the rights of the individual. He championed the reporting of parliamentary proceedings, and in 1776 introduced the first ever bill for parliamentary reform.
Nowhere was the debate about freedom more apparent than in the battle between the commercial interests of the landed gentry (and in particular, plantation owners) and the rights of the oppressed – the slaves – whose rights were promoted by influential Quakers. However, it wasn’t just a fight about the rights and wrongs of slavery; it was also about the much wider question of what freedom meant, what freedom of expression amounted to, what freedom to live out your life according to your personal beliefs and standards really involved. It was never a gradual path, and along the way there were attempts to impose greater controls; the growth of groups such as the Society for the Reformation of Manners being one example, the trial of John Wilkes for seditious libel another. Later, in 1792 and 1793, sedition trials were brought against a group of individuals calling for parliamentary reform, and two years later thirty men were charged with high treason in an attempt by the government to destroy the British radical movement. When the trials collapsed the government was forced to pass two ‘gagging acts’ (the Seditious Meetings Act and the Treasonable Practices Act, both in 1795). But while these great ideals of freedom were being passionately debated, the man-in-the-street just got on with living his life. Perhaps John Wilkes got it right when he sagely observed in his Essay on Woman (a bawdy parody of Pope’s Essay on Man), ‘life can little more supply/Than just a few good fucks and then we die.’
Freedom always existed on two levels: as a noble concept fought over and proclaimed by politicians and journalists; and as a sort of mantra for bloody-minded individuals (‘This Englishman’s home is his castle: it’s my life and I will damned well live it how I want’). As long as John Bull was free to fornicate when he wanted, with whoever he wanted, then he probably was not too worried about who got the vote.
While the eighteenth century saw a much more open discussion about sexual matters it did not mean that the floodgates were opened evenly. Men could still be forced to pay massive damages for what was known as criminal conversation (adultery, in other words). Witness the case of the Duke of Cumberland, brother to His Majesty King George III. Caught in flagrante with the wife of Lord Grosvenor in 1769, he was ordered to pay damages to His Lordship amounting to what would nowadays be around one million pounds.
A relaxation in legal penalties did not stop moral crusaders from trying to tug the moral tide back towards puritanism, and it would be a mistake to see the eighteenth century as a smooth progression towards sexual freedom of choice. There were remarkable excesses – the behaviour of the Prince of Wales, who deserves his epithet as the Randy Regent, springs to mind – but there were also attempts by the Church and the State to re-impose rules relating to human behaviour.
Taken as a whole, the eighteenth century saw great changes in the way sexual behaviour was regarded. But then came Mary Wollstonecraft: a woman who lived openly with her lover, who had a child by him and who had tried to commit suicide not once but twice, and who stuck the proverbial two fingers up at anyone who disapproved of her lifestyle. In so doing she probably set back her cause by a hundred years. Nowadays she may be regarded as a proto-feminist, at the vanguard of the movement towards equality, but two centuries ago the public were horrified at her lifestyle and people turned their backs on her ideas. It just went to show that the ebb and flow of the moral tide was never smooth, and there were always exceptions that proved the rule.
More than anything else the century saw a dichotomy: a split between what was acceptable for the rich and what was acceptable for the poor; a split between the aristocracy and the general public; and above all, a schism between what was acceptable in London and what was acceptable in the country. It was an exciting century: a period of change, adventure, discovery, openness and glamour. It was an era when sex workers could strut their stuff in outfits which would have done justice to a duchess, where hookers attended masquerade balls dressed as nuns and hoped to get off with a prince dressed as a farmhand. It was a century when stories of adultery ensured that divorce trial reports were sensational reading for a prurient public. It was an era when you could visit the Summer Exhibition of the Royal Academy and see the portrait of a leading royal hanging next to the most infamous courtesan. It was also an era when venereal disease wrought havoc with the bodies of tens of thousands of men, women and children. Celebrity status was bestowed, then as now, upon the most unworthy of recipients. And if we want to examine the sexual hypocrisy of our present era we can do no better than look at the hypocrisy of the eighteenth century.
Sin, Death and the Devil – suggesting that the (naked) Prime Minister was having an affair with the Queen.
Chapter 1
Matters Medical
Ah, the eighteenth century: the Age of Reason, a.k.a. the Age of Enlightenment! Such terms are bandied about as if the new century was marked by a light being turned on, illuminating the dark corners of ignorance in a single movement. It was not, of course, anything like that. In many ways the century remained an era of uninformed superstition, no more so than in the area of understanding sexual desire, and the mechanics of the human body and reproduction.
William Hogarth’s take on the story of Mary Toft, giving birth to numerous rabbits …
Take the extraordinary case of Godalming woman Mary Toft. In 1726 she became pregnant. In the words of Mist’s Weekly Journal, ‘the woman hath made Oath, that two Months ago, being working in a Field with other Women, they put up a Rabbit, who running from them, they pursued it, but to no Purpose: This created in her such a Longing to it, that she (being with Child) was taken ill and miscarried, and from that Time she hath not been able to avoid thinking of Rabbits.’
Mary went on to claim that following the miscarriage she gave birth to various rabbits and other animal parts. Some of these pieces of flesh were sent to John Howard, a man-midwife of thirty years’ experience who lived in nearby Guildford. He may have been dubious, but nevertheless he visited Mary, whereupon she ‘gave birth’ to ‘three legs of a Cat of a Tabby Colour, and one leg of a Rabbet.’
News of the extraordinary ‘birth’ reached London and was quickly reported in the national press, and in early November a man called Henry Davenant went to see for himself what was happening. The gullible Davenant, a member of the court of King George I, appeared to accept everything at face value, and wrote a number of letters seeking to share his remarkable discovery with various members of the medical profession. The case came to the attention of the surgeon to the Royal Household, a Swiss gentleman by the name of Nathaniel St André. In fairness, St André probably owed his position at court solely to the fact that he spoke German, a prerequisite in the court of the first Hanoverian king.
Mary was by now enjoying her moment of fame, her place in the spotlight, and happily produced a number of lagomorph (i.e. bunny parts) from her nether regions. Other doctors were called on for their opinions. Some, such as John Maubray, were keen to endorse the story because it supported the belief in maternal impression; the idea that conception and pregnancy could be affected by the dreams of the pregnant mother. In The Female Physician Maubray had warned pregnant women that overfamiliarity with household pets could cause their children to resemble those pets. He wrote: ‘Suppose [a woman] conceives in her mind some deformed Spirit or Animal, with Horns, Snout, Wings, Cloven Feet etc (as has sometimes happened): What should hinder this woman to produce a birth with these monstrous marks?’ Indeed, he maintained that it was ‘perfectly common for women to mark her child with pears, plums, milk, wine or anything else, upon the least trifling accident happening to her.’
Despite being a qualified physician and a teacher of midwifery, he maintained that women could give birth to tiny creatures called sooterkins, about the size of a mouse. This idea had been prevalent in Holland, where women were allegedly inclined to sit on top of their cooking stoves, and this ‘incubation’ was believed to cause sooterkins to develop.
On 3 December 1726 St André published a forty-page pamphlet detailing the extraordinary story. His timing was poor. The following day Mary was forced to make an admission that she had fabricated the entire story, and that she had simply inserted animal parts into her vagina as a short-cut to fame, and fortune.
The entire hoax caused the medical profession to be held up to ridicule. But the underlying idea of maternal impression remained powerful, with echoes in folkloric stories that being startled by a hare could cause a child to be born with a hare-lip and that eating too many lobsters could cause port-wine stain birthmarks. A century later there were still so-called experts who believed that the deformities exhibited by Joseph Merrick (the ‘Elephant Man’) were the result of his mother being startled by a pachyderm.
But if the medical profession emerged from the Mary Toft case in a poor light, it was no more than it deserved. For much of the century, medicine followed the Galen theory of the four humours. Galen, the Anglicized name of Claudius Galenus, was a Greek physician, surgeon and philosopher in the Roman Empire. Since the time of Aristotle and Socrates the idea of the body being made up of a combination of hot, dry, cold and wet components (fire, air, earth and water) led physicians to the idea of treatment by opposites. Balance was necessary, even if it meant using enemas, laxatives, blood-letting and violent purging to try to establish equilibrium in a sick patient. The theory held that the four humours existed as liquids within the body and were identified as blood, phlegm, black bile and yellow bile. Youth was hot and moist, age was dry and cold, and men as a sex were hotter and drier than women. A woman’s menstrual cycle was simply an example of imbalance: a woman’s body was softer and more like a sponge than a man’s and therefore needed to be emptied of excess blood on a regular basis. If it was not emptied during a monthly period, then a nose bleed – or vomiting blood – was seen as a perfectly normal alternative.
There was very little understanding about ovulation, and no comprehension that the menstrual cycle involved the shedding of the lining of the womb. It was just thought that it represented the discharge of an excessive build-up of liquid from all over the body. It follows from this that the medical knowledge of conception and contraception were rudimentary to say the least. It is more likely that a woman would know rather more about the workings of her body than the vast majority of the medical profession. William Harvey may have published his book on the function of the heart and the circulation of blood in 1626, but doctors a century later still believed that if a woman did not have a regular period she would have to be bled from a vein in her arm. Furthermore, even the renowned anatomist and physician William Hunter maintained that the uterus was capable of moving around thereby causing delirium, melancholy and frenzied paroxysms.
The reproduction argument, with the battle of the sexes as to who was most important for reproduction, had kicked off in 1678 when the Royal Society published its Philosophical Transactions containing a paper by an obscure Dutch shopkeeper called Antony van Leeuwenhoek. Devoid of scientific training or academic qualifications, Leeuwenhoek had developed lenses for the compound microscope and had spent his time looking at the usual small objects – the stinging mechanism of the bee, microscopic pond-life, bacteria in tooth plaque and so on – until he hit on the idea of examining his own ejaculant. He was the first to observe the tadpole-like sperm wriggling their way through the seminal fluid, but left it to others to try to work out the significance of what he had observed. He was apparently somewhat abashed at submitting his findings to the Royal Society in London, writing: ‘If your Lordship should consider that these observations may disgust or scandalise the learned, I earnestly beg your Lordship to regard them as private and to publish or destroy them as your Lordship sees fit.’ Other scientists then embroidered his findings, drawing pictures imagining what they might be looking at under their own microscopes, including one by Nicolaas Hartsoeker drawn in 1695 and shown at the end of this chapter.
Throughout the eighteenth century scientists had been peering through their microscopes examining human sperm, and had come up with two separate hypotheses as to what they were looking at. Those who saw the male role in reproduction as all-important believed that each sperm consisted of a fully-formed but tiny homunculus. These were planted in the woman, who simply acted as an incubator. On the other side were the ovists, who maintained that there must be some sort of egg, produced by the woman, and containing a pre-formed embryo which grew inside her without male intervention. Some even argued that coition was not needed for reproduction.
The argument between the ‘pre-formists’ (whether fully formed in the male sperm or in the woman’s egg) slowly gave way in the middle of the eighteenth century to the ‘epigenesists’ who argued that both males and females contributed to form a new organism. In 1759 it was discovered that chicks develop organs incrementally. The problem for the epigenerists was that no one was sure ‘who contributed what’ to the process and it was not until 1827 that Karl Ernst von Baer discovered the human ovum.
It was small wonder that in this vacuum of knowledge the medical profession, all of them male, made something of a hash of understanding menstruation. A young woman with irregular periods was thought to be suffering from the green sickness, a sure sign that she should be married off so that regular sex could help prevent a build-up of unhealthy humours. Nowadays we may identify the condition as hypochromic anaemia, but as late as 1803 the Edinburgh Practice of Physic, Surgery and Midwifery explained that ‘love and other passions of the mind’ cause chlorosis amatoria, otherwise known as the ‘green sickness’. This was exhibited by insufficient menstrual blood being produced by women. Francis Grose, in his Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue, published in 1811, defined ‘green sickness’ as ‘the disease of maids occasioned by celibacy.’ Love-sickness was an imbalance, exacerbated and inflamed by the reading of amorous novels. Sex was the obvious cure. And so we had a 1705 ballad called Enfield Common in which a ‘fair maiden’ suffering from green sickness is enthusiastically cured by a ‘lusty gallant’ who manages to ‘ease her, and fully please her’. In his words:
Then in a minute I left my Ginnet*,
and went aside with her into a Thicket,
Then with her leave there, a dose I gave her,
she straight confess’d her Sickness I did nick it.
To quote from John Maubray, here was a disease peculiar to mature virgins, and a disagreeable affliction of