Vulgar words in Studies in the Psychology of Sex, Volume 6 - Sex in Relation to Society (Page 1)

This book at a glance

ass x 1
bastard x 1
make love x 6
whore x 4
            

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~   ~   ~   Sentence 651   ~   ~   ~

In the country he would every day hear it stated in the crudest terms that such and such a girl has been found at night in a barn or a ditch making love with such and such a youth, or that the servant girl slips every night into the coachman's bed, the facts of sexual intercourse, pregnancy, and childbirth being spoken of in the plainest terms.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,714   ~   ~   ~

Under the unnatural perfection of security, liberty, and abundance our civilization has attained, the normal untrained human being is disposed to excess in almost every direction; he tends to eat too much and too elaborately, to drink too much, to become lazy faster than his work can be reduced, to waste his interest upon displays, and to make love too much and too elaborately.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,874   ~   ~   ~

In 1724, in his _Modest Defense of Publick Stews_, he argues that "the encouraging of public whoring will not only prevent most of the mischievous effects of this vice, but even lessen the quantity of whoring in general, and reduce it to the narrowest bounds which it can possibly be contained in."

~   ~   ~   Sentence 5,872   ~   ~   ~

Our sexual morality is thus, in reality, a bastard born of the union of property-morality with primitive ascetic morality, neither in true relationship to the vital facts of the sexual life.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 6,018   ~   ~   ~

They have a liberty of movement as complete as that of grown-up persons; some avail themselves of it to discuss politics and others to make love.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 6,429   ~   ~   ~

However instinctively a woman may desire that her husband shall be initiated in the art of making love to her, she may often well doubt whether the finest initiation is to be secured from the average prostitute.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 6,753   ~   ~   ~

To Jones's arguments he replies: "Common-sense warrants all you say, but yet you well know that the opinion of the world is so contrary to it, that were I to marry a whore, though my own, I should be ashamed of ever showing my face again."

~   ~   ~   Sentence 7,702   ~   ~   ~

He that takes another man's ox or ass is doubtless a transgressor; but he that puts himself out of the occasion of that temptation by keeping of his own seems to be a right honest and well-meaning man."

~   ~   ~   Sentence 8,190   ~   ~   ~

These conditions make marriage difficult; they make love and its engagements too serious a matter to be entered on lightly; they make actual sexual intercourse dangerous as well as disreputable.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 8,614   ~   ~   ~

In making love there must be no haste, wrote Ovid:-- "Crede mihi, non est Veneris properanda voluptas, Sed sensim tarda prolicienda mora."

~   ~   ~   Sentence 8,984   ~   ~   ~

Mrs. Pepys is not satisfied, however, till she makes her husband write a letter to Deb, telling her that she is little better than a whore, and that he hates her, though Deb is spared this, not by any stratagem of Pepys, but by the considerateness of the friend to whom the letter was entrusted for delivery.

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