Jaw-Dropping Truths About History’s Most venereal Practices

Jaw-Dropping Truths About History’s Most venereal Practices

Trista - January 9, 2019

7. Fanny Hill Revealed Kinky 18th Century Practices

England’s rather kinky bedroom practices in the 18th century were revealed to the world through Britain’s first pornographic novel Fanny Hill or Memoirs of a Woman of Pleasure, published in 1748. The author, John Cleland, described numerous scenes of kinky eroticism including orgies, spanking, whipping and more. The novel, which follows the exploits of an orphaned bisexual prostitute, contains a descriptive passage which details what is clearly BDSM behavior.

“At last, he twigged me so smartly as to fetch blood in more than one lash: at sight of which he flung down the rod, flew to me, kissed away the starting drops, and sucking the wounds eased a good deal of my pain. But now raising me on my knees, and making me kneel with them straddling wide, that tender part of me, naturally the province of pleasure, not of pain, came in for its share of suffering: for now, eyeing it wistfully, he directed the rod so that the sharp ends of the twigs lighted there, so sensibly, that I could not help wincing, and writhing my limbs with smart; so that my contortions of body must necessarily throw it into infinite variety of postures and points of view, fit to feast the luxury of the eye.

But still I bore every thing without crying out: when presently giving me another pause, he rushed, as it were, on that part whose lips, and round about, had felt this cruelty, and by way of reparation, glued his own to them; then he opened, shut, squeezed them, plucked softly the overgrowing moss, and all this in a style of wild passionate rapture and enthusiasm, that expressed excess of pleasure; till betaking himself to the rod again, encouraged by my passiveness, and infuriated with this strange taste of delight, he made my poor posteriors pay for the ungovernableness of it; for now showing them no quarter, the traitor cut me so, that I wanted but little of fainting away, when he gave over. And yet I did not utter one groan, or angry expostulation; but in my heart I resolved nothing so seriously, as never to expose myself again to the like severities.”

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