Man is nothing else than fetid sperm  

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-"[[Man is nothing else than fetid sperm|Man is nothing else than fetid sperm, a sack of dung, the food of worms. . . . You have never seen a viler dung-hill]]." Such was the outcome of [[Bernard of Clairvaux|St. Bernard]]'s cloistered [[Meditationes piissimae de conditione humana|Meditationes Piissimce]]. --[[Studies In The Psychology Of Sex]] Volume II+"[[Man is nothing else than fetid sperm|Man is nothing else than fetid sperm, a sack of dung, the food of worms. . . . You have never seen a viler dung-hill]]" is a popular dictum by [[Bernard of Clairvaux]] in ''[[Meditationes Piissimæ]]'', perhaps first brought to wider attention in Havelock Ellis's ''[[Studies in the Psychology of Sex, Volume 6]]''.
 + 
 +The original Latin reads: "Nihil aliud est homo quam sperma fetidum, saccus stercorum, cibus vermium."
 + 
 +Ellis cites the source as [[Jacques Paul Migne]]'s ''[[Patrologia]]'', vol. clxxiv, p. 489, cap. III.
 +==See also==
 +*[[Texts on lust by the early Church Fathers Saint Augustine, Saint Jerome and Clairvaux]]
 +*[[On the beauty of the human genitalia]]
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 +[[Category:dicta]]

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"Man is nothing else than fetid sperm, a sack of dung, the food of worms. . . . You have never seen a viler dung-hill" is a popular dictum by Bernard of Clairvaux in Meditationes Piissimæ, perhaps first brought to wider attention in Havelock Ellis's Studies in the Psychology of Sex, Volume 6.

The original Latin reads: "Nihil aliud est homo quam sperma fetidum, saccus stercorum, cibus vermium."

Ellis cites the source as Jacques Paul Migne's Patrologia, vol. clxxiv, p. 489, cap. III.

See also




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