Venus in Furs

Venus in Furs by Leopold von Sacher-Masoch

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Authors: Leopold von Sacher-Masoch
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him, she had him broken on the wheel—”
    “Disgusting,” cried Wanda. “I almost wish you might fall into the hands of a woman of their savage race. In the wolf's skin, under the teeth of the dogs, or upon the wheel, you would lose the taste for your kind of poetry.”
    “Do you think so? I hardly do.”
    “Have you actually lost your senses.”
    “Possibly. But let me go on. I developed a perfect passion for reading stories in which the extremest cruelties were described. I loved especially to look at pictures and prints which represented them. All the sanguinary tyrants that ever occupied a throne; the inquisitors who had the heretics tortured, roasted, and butchered; all the woman whom the pages of history have recorded as lustful, beautiful, and violent women like Libussa, Lucretia Borgia, Agnes of Hungary, Queen Margot, Isabeau, the Sultana Roxolane, the Russian Czarinas of last century—all these I saw in furs or in robes bordered with ermine.”
    “And so furs now rouse strange imaginings in you,” said Wanda, and simultaneously she began to drape her magnificent fur-cloak coquettishly about her, so that the dark shining sable played beautifully around her bust and arms. “Well, how do you feel now, half broken on the wheel?”
    Her piercing green eyes rested on me with a peculiar mocking satisfaction. Overcome by desire, I flung myself down before her, and threw my arms about her.
    “Yes—you have awakened my dearest dream,” I cried. “It has slept long enough.”
    “And this is?” She put her hand on my neck.
    I was seized with a sweet intoxication under the influence of this warm little hand and of her regard, which, tenderly searching, fell upon me through her half-closed lids.
    “To be the slave of a woman, a beautiful woman, whom I love, whom I worship.”
    “And who on that account maltreats you,” interrupted Wanda, laughing.
    “Yes, who fetters me and whips me, treads me underfoot, the while she gives herself to another.”
    “And who in her wantonness will go so far as to make a present of you to your successful rival when driven insane by jealousy you must meet him face to face, who will turn you over to his absolute mercy. Why not? This final tableau doesn't please you so well?”
    I looked at Wanda frightened.
    “You surpass my dreams.”
    “Yes, we women are inventive,” she said, “take heed, when you find your ideal, it might easily happen, that she will treat you more cruelly than you anticipate.”
    “I am afraid that I have already found my ideal!” I exclaimed, burying my burning face in her lap.
    “Not I?” exclaimed Wanda, throwing off her furs and moving about the room laughing. She was still laughing as I went downstairs, and when I stood musing in the yard, I still heard her peals of laughter above.
           * * * * *
    “Do you really then expect me to embody your ideal?” Wanda asked archly, when we met in the park to-day.
    At first I could find no answer. The most antagonistic emotions were battling within me. In the meantime she sat down on one of the stone-benches, and played with a flower.
    “Well—am I?”
    I kneeled down and seized her hands.
    “Once more I beg you to become my wife, my true and loyal wife; if you can't do that then become the embodiment of my ideal, absolutely, without reservation, without softness.”
    “You know I am ready at the end of a year to give you my hand, if you prove to be the man I am seeking,” Wanda replied very seriously, “but I think you would be more grateful to me if through me you realized your imaginings. Well, which do you prefer?”
    “I believe that everything my imagination has dreamed lies latent in your personality.”
    “You are mistaken.”
    “I believe,” I continued, “that you enjoy having a man wholly in your power, torturing him—”
    “No, no,” she exclaimed quickly, “or perhaps—.” She pondered.
    “I don't understand myself any longer,” she continued, “but I have a

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