criminal psychology-第106章
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one reason or another avoided it; and that her impotent husband was unsatisfactory was now indubitable。 The supposition that she wanted to get rid of him in order to marry somebody else was now inevitable; and as this somebody else was looked for and discovered; the adduction of evidence of her guilt was no longer difficult。
How captious it is to prove direct passion and to attach reasonable suspicion thereto; and how necessary it is; first of all; to establish what the concealing material is; is shown in a remark of Kraus;'1' who asserts that the wife never affects to be passionate with her husband; her desire is to seduce him and she could not desire that if she were not passionate。 This assertion is only correct in general。 It is not; however; true that woman has no reason for affectation; for there are enough cases in which some woman; rendered with child by a poor man; desires to seduce a man of wealth in order to get a wealthy father for her child。 In such and similar cases; the woman could make use of every trick of seduction without needing to be in the least passionately disposed。
'1' A。 Kraus: Die Psychologie des Verbrechens。 Tbingen 1884。
Another important form of submerged sexuality is ennui。 Nobody can say what ennui is; and everybody knows it most accurately。 Nobody would say that it is burdensome; and yet everybody knows; again; that a large group of evil deeds spring from ennui。 It is not the same as idleness; I may be idle without being bored; and I may be bored although I am busy。 At best; boredom may be called an attitude which the mind is thrown into because of an unsatisfied desire for different things。 We speak of a tedious region; a tedious lecture; and tedious company only by way of metonymywe always mean the emotional state they put us into。 The internal condition is determinative; for things that are boresome to one may be very interesting to another。 A collection; a library; a lecture; are all tedious and boresome by transposition of the emotional state to the objective content; and in this way the ides of boredom gets a wide scope。 We; however; shall speak of boredom as an emotional state。 We find it most frequently among girls; young women; and among undeveloped or feminine men as a very significant phenomenon。 So found; it is that particular dreamful; happy; or unhappy attitude expressed in desire for something absent; in quiet reproaches concerning the lack of the satisfaction of that desire; with the continually recurring wish for filling out an inner void。 The basis of all this is mainly sex。 It can not be proved as such mathematically; but experience shows that the emotional attitude occurs only in the presence of sexual energy; that it is lacking when the desires are satisfied; but that otherwise; even the richest and best substitution can offer no satisfaction。 It is not daring; therefore; to infer the erotic starting…point。 Again we see how the moralizing and training influence of rigidly…required work suppresses all superfluous states which themselves make express demands and might want complete satisfaction。
But everything has its limits; and frequently the gentle; still power of sweet ennui is stronger than the pressure and compulsion of work。 When this power is present; it never results in good; rarely in anything indifferent; and frequently forbidden fruit ripens slowly in its shadow。 Nobody will assert that ennui is the cause of illicit relations; of seduction; of adultery and all the many sins that depend on itfrom petty misappropriations for the sake of the beloved; to the murder of the unloved husband。 But ennui is for the criminal psychologist a sign that the woman was unsatisfied with what she had and wanted something else。 From wishing to willing; from willing to asking; is not such a great distance。 But if we ask the repentant sinner when she began to think of her criminal action we always learn that she suffered from incurable ennui; in which wicked thoughts came and still more wicked plans were hatched。 Any experienced criminal psychologist will tell you; when you ask him; whether he has been much subject to mistakes in trying to explain women's crimes from the starting…point of their ennui。 The neighborhood knows of the periods of this ennui; and the sinner thinks that they are almost discovered if she is asked about them。 Cherchez la femme; cherchez l'amour; cherchez l'ennui; and hundreds of times you find the solution。
Conceit; too; may be caused by hidden sexuality。 We need only to use the word denotatively; for when we speak of the conceit of a scholar; an official; or a soldier; we mean properly the desire for fame; the activity of getting oneself praised and recognized。 Conceit proper is only womanish or a property of feminine men; and just as; according to Darwin; the coloration of birds; insects; and even plants serves only the purposes of sexual selection and has; therefore; sexual grounds; so also the conceit of woman has only sexual purpose。 She is conceited for men alone even though through the medium of other women。 As Lotze wrote in his ‘‘Mikrokosmus;'' ‘‘Everything that calls attention to her person without doing her any harm is instinctively used by women as a means in sexual conflict。'' There is much truth in the terms ‘‘means'' and ‘‘sexual conflict。'' The man takes the battle up directly; and if we deal with this subject without frills we may not deny that animals behave just as men do。 The males battle directly with each other for the sake of the females; who are compelled to study how to arouse this struggle for their person; and thus hit upon the use of conceit in sexual conflict。 That women are conceited does not much matter to us criminal psychologists; we know it and do not need to be told。 But the forms in which their conceit expresses itself are important; its consequences and its relation to other conditions are important。
To make use of feminine conceit in the court…room is not an art but an unpermissible trick which might lead too far。 Whoever wants to succeed with women; as Madame de Rieux says; ‘‘must bring their self…love into play。'' And St。 Prospre: ‘‘Women are to be sought not through their sensestheir weakness is in their heart and conceit。'' These properties are; however; so powerful that they may easily lead to deception。 If the judge does not understand how to follow this prescription it does no good; but if he does understand it he has a weapon with which woman may be driven too far; and then wounded pride; anger; and even suggestion work in far too vigorous a manner。 For example; a woman wants to defend her lover before the judge。 Now; if the latter succeeds by the demonstration of natural true facts in wounding her conceit; in convincing her that she is betrayed; harmed; or forgotten by her protected lover; or if she is merely made to believe this; she goes; in most cases; farther than she can excuse; and accuses and harms him as much as possible; tries; if she is able; to destroy himwhether rightly or wrongly she does not care。 She has lost her lover and nobody else shall have him。 ‘‘Feminine conceit;'' says Lombroso; ‘‘explains itself especially in the fact that the most important thing in the life of woman is the struggle for men。'' This assertion is strengthened by a long series of examples and historical considerations and can serve as a guiding thread in many labyrinthine cases。 First of all; it is important to know in many trials whether a woman has already taken up this struggle for men; i。 e。; whether she has a lover; or wishes to have a lover。 If it can be shown that she has suddenly become conceited; or her conceit has been really intensified; the question has an unconditionally affirmative answer。 Frequently enough one may succeed even in determining the particular man; by ascertaining with certainty the time at which this conceit first began; and whether it had closer or more distant reference to some man。 If these conditions; once discovered; are otherwise at all confirmed; and there are no mistakes in observation; the inference is inevitably certain。
We learn much concerning feminine conceit when we ask how a man could have altered the inclination of a woman whose equal