<SPAN name="VADEMECUM_PART_I_CHAPTER_X"id="VADEMECUM_PART_I_CHAPTER_X"></SPAN>
<h2><!-- Page 69 --> CHAPTER X</h2>
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<p><i>Virginity, what it is, in what it consists, and how vitiated;
together with the Opinions of the Learned about the Change of Sex
in the Womb, during the Operation of Nature in forming the
Body.</i></p>
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<p>There are many ignorant people that boast of their skill in the
knowledge of virginity, and some virgins have undergone harsh
censures through their ignorant conclusions; I therefore thought it
highly necessary to clear up this point, that the towering
imaginations of conceited ignorance might be brought down, and the
fair sex (whose virtues are so illustriously bright that they
excite our wonder and command our imitation), may be freed from the
calumnies and detractions of ignorance and envy; and so their
honour may continue as unspotted, as they have kept their persons
uncontaminated and free from defilement.</p>
<p>Virginity, in a strict sense, signifies the prime, the chief,
the best of anything; and this makes men so desirous of marrying
virgins, imagining some secret pleasure is to be enjoyed in their
embraces, more than in those of widows, or of such as have been
lain with before, though not many years ago, a very great personage
thought <!-- Page 70 -->
differently, and to use his own expression:—"The getting a
maidenhead was such a piece of drudgery, that it was fitter for a
coal heaver than a prince."<SPAN name="FNanchor_1_1"id="FNanchor_1_1"></SPAN> <SPAN href='#Footnote_1_1'><sup>[1]</sup></SPAN> But
this was only his opinion, for I am sure that other men think
differently.</p>
<p>The curious inquirers into the secrets of Nature, have observed,
that in young maidens in the <i>sinus pudoris</i>, or in what is
called the neck of the womb, is that wonderful production usually
called the <i>hymen</i>, but in French <i>bouton de rose</i>, or
rosebud, because it resembles the expanded bud of a rose or a gilly
flower. From this the word <i>defloro</i>, or, deflower, is
derived, and hence taking away virginity is called deflowering a
virgin, most being of the opinion that the virginity is altogether
lost when this membrane is fractured and destroyed by violence;
when it is found perfect and entire, however, no penetration has
been effected; and in the opinion of some learned physicians there
is neither hymen nor expanded skin which contains blood in it,
which some people think, flows from the ruptured membrane at the
first time of sexual intercourse.</p>
<p>Now this <i>claustrum virginale</i>, or flower, is composed of
four little buds like myrtle berries, which are full and plump in
virgins, but hang <!-- Page 71 --> loose and flag in women; and these are placed in the
four angles of the <i>sinus pudoris</i>, joined together by little
membranes and ligatures, like fibres, each of them situated in the
testicles, or spaces between each bud, with which, in a manner,
they are proportionately distended, and when once this membrane is
lacerated, it denotes <i>Devirgination</i>. Thus many ignorant
people, finding their wives defective in this respect on the first
night, have immediately suspected their chastity, concluding that
another man had been there before them, when indeed, such a rupture
may happen in several ways accidentally, as well as by sexual
intercourse, viz. by violent straining, coughing, or sneezing, the
stoppage of the urine, etc., so that the entireness or the fracture
of that which is commonly taken for a woman's virginity or
maidenhead, is no absolute sign of immorality, though it is more
frequently broken by copulation than by any other means.<SPAN name="FNanchor_2_2" id="FNanchor_2_2"></SPAN> <SPAN href='#Footnote_2_2'><sup>[2]</sup></SPAN></p>
<p><!-- Page 72 --> And now to
say something of the change of the sexes in the womb. The genital
parts of the sexes are so unlike each other in substance,
composition, situation, figure, action and use that nothing is more
unlike to each other than they are, and the more, all parts of the
body (the breasts excepted, which in women swell, because Nature
ordained them for suckling the infant) have an exact resemblance to
each other, so much the more do the genital parts of one sex
differ, when compared with the other, and if they be thus different
in form, how much more are they so in their use.</p>
<p>The venereal feeling also proceeds from different causes; in men
from the desire of emission, and in women from the desire of
reception. All these things, then, considered I cannot but wonder,
he adds, how any one can imagine that the female genital organs can
be changed into the male organ, since the sexes
<!-- Page 73 --> can be
distinguished only by those parts, nor can I well impute the reason
for this vulgar error to anything but the mistake of inexpert
midwives, who have been deceived by the faulty conformation of
those parts, which in some males may have happened to have such
small protrusions that they could not be seen, as appears by the
example of a child who was christened in Paris under the name of
<i>Ivan</i>, as a girl, and who afterwards turned out to be a boy,
and on the other hand, the excessive tension of the clytoris in
newly-born female infants may have occasioned similar mistakes.
Thus far Pliny in the negative, and notwithstanding what he has
said, there are others, such as Galen, who assert the affirmative.
"A man," he says, "is different from a woman, only by having his
genitals outside his body, whereas a woman has them inside her."
And this is certain, that if Nature having formed a male should
convert him into a female, she has nothing else to do but to turn
his genitals inward, and again to turn a woman into a man by a
contrary operation. This, however, is to be understood of the child
whilst it is in the womb and not yet perfectly formed, for Nature
has often made a female child, and it has remained so for a month
or two, in its mother's womb; but afterwards the heat greatly
<!-- Page 74 --> increasing in
the genital organs, they have protruded and the child has become a
male, but nevertheless retained some things which do not befit the
masculine sex, such as female gestures and movements, a high voice,
and a more effeminate temper than is usual with men; whilst, on the
other hand, the genitals have become inverted through cold humours,
but yet the person retained a masculine air, both in voice and
gesture. Now, though both these opinions are supported by several
reasons, yet I think the latter are nearer the truth, for there is
not that vast difference between the genitals of the two sexes as
Pliny asserts; for a woman has, in a way, the same <i>pudenda</i>
as a man, though they do not appear outwardly, but are inverted for
the convenience of generation; one being solid and the other
porous, and that the principal reason for changing sexes is, and
must be attributed to heat or cold, which operates according to its
greater or lesser force.</p>
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<p>FOOTNOTES:</p>
<SPAN name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1"></SPAN> <SPAN href='#FNanchor_1_1'>[1]</SPAN>
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<p>Attributed to George IV (Translator).</p>
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<SPAN name="Footnote_2_2" id="Footnote_2_2"></SPAN> <SPAN href='#FNanchor_2_2'>[2]</SPAN>
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<p>A young man was once tried at Rutland Assizes for violating a
virgin, and after close questioning, the girl swearing positively
in the matter, and naming the time, place and manner of the action,
it was resolved that she should be examined by a skilful surgeon
and two midwives, who were to report on oath, which they did, and
declared that the membranes were intact and unlacerated, and that,
in their opinion, her body had not been penetrated. This had its
due effect upon the jury, and they acquitted the prisoner, and the
girl afterwards confessed that she swore it against him out of
revenge, as he had promised to marry her, and had afterwards
declined.</p>
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