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Life of Leopold von Sacher-Masoch
See Novels of Leopold von Sacher-Masoch
and Other Novels of Leopold
Von Sacher-Masoch
Leopold von Sacher-Masoch
Leopold von Sacher-Masoch was born in Lemberg on January 27, 1836 and died in
Lindheim on March 9, 1895.
Sacher-Masoch is best known for his novel, “Venus in Furs,” about the
masochistic relationship between Serverin von Kusiemski dreamer and dillatante,
and Wanda von Dunajew, a beautiful, free-spirited widow, to whom he becomes a
slave. The novel is based on real events from the Sacher-Masoch’s life. It is
was also the novel that Dr. Richard von Krafft-Ebing singled out in the origin
of the word “Masochism.”
According to “Studies in the Psychology of Sex” by Havelock Ellis, Leopold von
Sacher-Masoch was born in 1836 at Lemberg in Galicia. He was of Spanish, German
and more especially Slavonic race. The founder of the family may be said to be a
certain Don Matthias Sacher, a young Spanish nobleman, in the sixteenth century,
who settled in Prague. The novelist’s father was director of police in Lemberg
and married Charlotte von Masoch, a Little Russian lady of noble birth.
Sacher-Masoch, the novelist, the eldest son of this union, was not born until
after nine years of marriage, and in infancy was so delicate that he was not
expected to survive. He began to improve, however, when his mother gave him to
be suckled to a robust Russian peasant woman, for whom, he said later he gained
not only health, but “his soul”; from her Sacher-Masoch learned all the strange
and melancholy legends of her people and a love of the Little Russians which
never left him. While still a child young Sacher-Masoch was in the midst of the
bloody scenes of the revolution which culminated in 1848. When Sacher-Masoch was
12 the family migrated to Prague, and the boy, though precocious in his
development, then first learned the German language, of which he attained so
fine a mastery. At a very early age Sacher-Masoch had found the atmosphere, and
even some of the most characteristic elements, of the peculiar types which mark
his work as a novelist.
It is interesting to trace the germinal elements of those peculiarities which so
strongly affected Sacher-Masoch's imagination on the sexual side. As a child,
Sacher-Masoch was greatly attracted by representations of cruelty; he loved to
gaze at pictures of executions, the legends of martyrs were his favorite
reading, and with the onset of puberty he regularly dreamed that he was fettered
and in the power of a cruel woman who tortured him. It has been said by an
anonymous author that the women of Galicia either rule their husbands entirely
and make them their slaves or themselves sink to be the wretchedest of slaves.
At the age of 10, according to Schlichtegroll’s narrative, the child Leopold von
Sacher-Masoch witnessed a scene in which a woman of the former kind, a certain
Countess Xenobia X., a relative of his own on the paternal side, played the
chief part, and this scene left an undying impress on his imagination. The
Countess was a beautiful but wanton creature, the child adored her, impressed
alike by her beauty and the costly furs she wore. She accepted Sacher-Masoch's
devotion and little services and with sometimes allow him to assist her in
dressing; on one occasion, as he was kneeling before her to put on her ermine
slippers, he kissed her feet; she smiled and gave him a kick which filled him
with pleasure. Not long afterward occurred the episode which so profoundly
affected his imagination. Sacher-Masoch was playing with his sisters at
hide-and-seek and had carefully hidden himself behind the dresses on a
clothes-rail in the Countess’s bedroom. At this moment the Countess suddenly
entered the house and ascended the stairs, followed by a lover, and the child,
who dared not betray his presence, saw the Countess sink down on a sofa and
begin to caress her lover. But a few moments later the husband, accompanied by
two friends, dashed into the room. Before, however, he could decide which of the
lovers to turn against the Countess had risen and struck him so powerful a blow
in the face with her fist that he fell back streaming with blood. She then
seized a whip, drove all three men out of the room, and in the confusion the
lover slipped away. At this moment the clothes-rail fell and the child, the
involuntary witness of the scene, was revealed to the Countess, who now fell on
him in anger, threw him to the ground, pressed her knee on his shoulder, and
struck him unmercifully. The pain was great, and yet Sacher-Masoch was conscious
of a strange pleasure. While this castigation was proceeding the Count returned,
no longer in a rage, but meek and humble as a slave, and kneeled down before her
to beg forgiveness. As the boy escaped he saw her kick her husband. The child
could not resist the temptation to return to the spot; the door was closed and
he could see nothing, but he heard the sound of the whip and the groans of the
Count beneath his wife’s blows.
It is unnecessary to insist that in this scene, acting on a highly sensitive and
somewhat particular child, we have the key to the emotional attitude which
affected so much of Sacher-Masoch’s work. As his biographer remarks, woman
became to him, during a considerable part of his life, a creature at once to be
loved and hated, a being whose beauty and brutality enabled her to set foot at
will on the necks of men, and in the heroine of his first important novel, the
Emissär, dealing with the Polish Revolution, he embodied the contradictory
personality of Countess Xenobia. Even the whip and the fur garments,
Sacher-Masoch’s favorite emotional symbols, find their explanation in this early
episode. He was accustomed to say of an attractive woman: “I should like to see
her in furs,” and, of an unattractive woman: “I could not imagine her in furs.”
Sacher-Masoch's writing-paper at one time was adorned with a figure in Russian
Boyar costume, her cloak lined with ermine, and brandishing a scourge. On his
walls he liked pictures of women in furs, of the kind of which there is so
magnificent an example by Rubens in the gallery at Munich. He would even keep a
woman’s fur cloak on an ottoman in his study and stroke it from time to time,
finding that his brain thus received the same kind of stimulation as Schiller
found in the odor of rotten apples.
At the age of 13, in the revolution of 1848, young Sacher-Masoch received his
baptism of fire; carried away by the popular movement, he helped defend the
barricades together with a young lady, a relative of his family, an amazon with
a pistol in her girdle, such as later he loved to depict. The episode was,
however, but a brief interruption of his education; he pursued his studies with
brilliance, and on the higher side his education was aided by his father’s
esthetic tastes. Amateur theatricals were in special favor at his home, and here
even the serious plays of Goethe and Gogol were performed, thus helping to train
and direct the boy’s taste. It is, perhaps, however, significant that it was a
tragic event which, at the age of 16, first brought to his the full realization
of life and the consciousness of his own power. This was the sudden death of his
favorite sister. Sacher-Masoch became serious and quiet, and always regarded
this grief as the turning-point in his life.
At the Universities of Prague and Graz Sacher-Masoch studied with such zeal that
when only 19 he took his doctor’s degree in law and shortly afterward became a
privatdocent for German history at Graz. Gradually, however, the charms of
literature asserted themselves definitively, and he soon abandoned teaching. He
took part, however, in the war of 1866 in Italy, and the battle of Solferino he
was decorated on the field for bravery in action by the Austrian field-marshal.
These incidents, however, had little disturbing influence on Sacher-Masoch’s
literary career, and he was gradually acquiring a European reputation by his
novels and stories.
A far more seriously disturbing influence had already begun to be exerted on
Sacher-Masoch's life by a series of love-episodes. Some of these were of slight
and ephemeral character; some were a source of unalloyed happiness, all the more
so if there was an element of extravagance to appeal to his Quixotic nature.
Sacher-Masoch always longed to give a dramatic and romantic character to his
life, his wife says, and he spent some blissful days on an occasion when he ran
away to Florence with a Russian princess as her private secretary. Most often
these episodes culminated in deception and misery. It was after a relationship
of this kind from which he could not free himself for four years that he wrote
Die Geschiedene Frau, Passionsgeschichte eines Idealisten, putting into it much
of his own personal history. At one time his was engaged to a sweet and charming
young girl. Then it was that Sacher-Masoch met a young woman at Graz, Laura
Rümelin, 27 years of age, engaged as a glovemaker, and living with her mother.
Though of poor parentage, with little or on knowledge of the world, she had
great natural ability and intelligence. Schlichtegroll represents her as
spontaneously engaging is a mysterious intrigue with the novelist. Her own
detailed narrative renders the circumstances more intelligible. She approached
Sacher-Masoch by letter, adopting for disguise the name of his heroine Wanda von
Dunajew, in order to recover possession of some compromising letters which had
been written to him as a joke, by a friend of hers. Sacher-Masoch insisted on
seeing his correspondent before returning the letters, and with his eager thirst
for romantic adventure he imagined that she was a married woman of the
aristocratic world, probably a Russian countess, whose simple costume was a
disguise. Not anxious to reveal the prosaic facts, she humored him in his
imaginations and a web of mysticification was thus formed. A strong attraction
grew up on both sides and, though for some time Laura Rümelin maintained the
mystery and held herself aloof from him, a relationship formed and a child was
born. Thereupon, in 1893, they married. Before long, however, there was
disillusion on both sides. She began to detect the morbid, chimerical, and
unpractical aspects of his character, and he realized that not only was his wife
not an aristocrat, but, what was of more importance to him, she was by no means
the domineering heroine of his dreams. Soon after marriage, in the course of an
innocent romp in which the whole of the small household took part, he asked his
wife to inflict a whipping on him. She refused, and he thereupon suggested that
the servant should do it; the wife failed to take this idea seriously; but he
had it carried out, with great satisfaction at the severity of the castigation
he received. When, however, his wife explained to him that, after this incident,
it was impossible for the servant to stay, Sacher-Masoch quite agreed and she
was at once discharged. But he constantly found pleasure in placing his wife in
awkward or compromising circumstances, a pleasure she was too normal to share.
This necessarily led to much domestic wretchedness. He had persuaded her,
against her wish, to whip him nearly every day, with whips he devised, having
nails attached to them. He found this a stimulant to his literary work, and it
enabled him to dispense in his novels with his stereotyped heroine who is always
engaged in subjugating men, for, as he explained to his wife, when he had the
reality in his life he was no longer obsessed by it in his imaginative dreams.
Not content with this, however, he was constantly desirous for his wife to be
unfaithful. He even put an advertisement in a newspaper to the effect that a
young an beautiful woman desired to make the acquaintance of an energetic man.
The wife, however, though she wished to please her husband, was not anxious to
do so to this extent. She went to an hotel by appointment to meet a stranger who
answered this advertisement, but when she had explained to him the state of
affairs he chivalrously conducted her home. It was some time before
Sacher-Masoch eventually succeeded in rendering his wife unfaithful. He attended
to the minutest details of her toilette on this occasion, and as he bade her
farewell at the door he exclaimed: “How I envy him!” This episode thoroughly
humiliated the wife, and from that moment her love for her husband turned to
hate. A final separation was only a question of time. Sacher-Masoch formed a
relationship with Hulda Meister, who had come to act as secretary and translator
to him, while his wife became attached to Rosenthal, a clever journalist later
known to readers of the Figaro as “Jacques St.-Cère,” who realized her painful
position and felt sympathy and affection for her. She went to live with him in
Paris and, having refused to divorce her husband, he eventually obtained a
divorce from her; she states, however, that she never at any time had physical
relationships with Rosenthal, who was a man or fragile organization and health.
Sacher-Masoch united himself to Hulda Meister, who is described by the first
wife as a prim and faded but coquettish old maid, and by the biographer as a
highly accomplished and gentle woman, who cared for him with almost maternal
devotion. No doubt there is truth in both descriptions. It must be noted that,
as Wanda clearly shows, apart from his abnormal sexual temperament,
Sacher-Masoch was kind and sympathetic, and he was strongly attached to his
eldest child. Eulenburg also quotes the statement of a distinguished Austrian
woman writer with him that, “apart from his sexual eccentricities, he was an
amiable, simple, and sympathetic man with a touchingly tender love for his
children.” He had very few needs, did not drink nor smoke, and though he liked
to put the woman he was attached to in rich furs and fantastically gorgeous
raiment he dressed himself with extreme simplicity. His wife quotes the saying
of another woman that he was as simple as child and as naughty as a monkey.
In 1883 Sacher-Masoch and Hulda Meister settled in Lindheim, a village in
Germany near the Taunus, a spot to which the novelist seems to have been
attached because in the ground of his little estate was a haunted and ruined
tower associated with a tragic medieval episode. Here, after many legal delays,
Sacher-Masoch was able to render his union with Hulda Meister legitimate; here
two children were in due course born, and here the novelist spent the remaining
years of his life in comparative peace. At first, as is usual, treated with
suspicion by the peasants, Sacher-Masoch gradually acquired great influence over
them; he became a kind of Tolstoy in the rural life around him, the friend and
confidant of all the villagers (something of Tolsoy’s communism is also, it
appears, to be seen in the books he wrote at this time), while the theatrical
performances which he inaugurated, and in which his wife took an active part,
spread the fame of the household in many neighboring villages. Meanwhile his
health began to break up; a visit to Nauheim in 1894 was of no benefit, and he
died March 9, 1895.
Novels of Leopold von Sacher-Masoch
and Other Novels of Leopold
Von Sacher-Masoch
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