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Ellis, Havelock, 1859-1939

"Sexual Inversion"


This primitive indifference is doubtless also a factor in the prevalence
of homosexuality among criminals, although, here, it must be remembered,
two other factors (congenital abnormality and the isolation of
imprisonment) have to be considered. In Russia, Tarnowsky observes that
all pederasts are agreed that the common people are tolerably indifferent
to their sexual advances, which they call "gentlemen's games." A
correspondent remarks on "the fact, patent to all observers, that simple
folk not infrequently display no greater disgust for the abnormalities of
sexual appetite than they do for its normal manifestations."[42] He knows
of many cases in which men of lower class were flattered and pleased by
the attentions of men of higher class, although not themselves inverted.
And from this point of view the following case, which he mentions, is very
instructive:--
A pervert whom I can trust told me that he had made advances to
upward of one hundred men in the course of the last fourteen
years, and that he had only once met with a refusal (in which
case the man later on offered himself spontaneously) and only
once with an attempt to extort money.


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