John M. McMahon
Paralysin Cave: Impotence, Perception, and Text in the Satyrica of Petronius
(Leiden: E. J. Brill, 1998)

Summary

While an aggressive virility stands as the predominant imagery of male sexuality in ancient culture, reference to impotence appears relatively infrequently and is most commonly associated with literary genres of a humorous or invective nature. Causes for the affliction were believed to be of both natural (physiological) and supernatural (divine or magical) origin, the contrast between which is best seen in the discussion of the impotent Scythians in the Hippocratic Airs, Waters, Places (22) and the corresponding treatment by Herodotus (1.105). Literary evidence of how impotence was viewed comes from Ovid Amores 3.7 and Petronius (e.g. Sat. 130) where both natural and supernatural elements function in an integrated treatment typical of folk medical systems. Such systems are based on the perception that life consisted of an array of corporal, mental, and spiritual elements and that good health resulted from a balanced combination of these. Ancient approaches correspond closely to certain modern folk medicinal systems in which impotence is seen as a creeping paralysis that involves the entire body and which results from a failure to cope with everyday stresses or from externally generated malign influences.

The substances considered stimulative and curative for male sexual dysfunction are encountered in a wide variety of literary, scientific, medical, and subliterary texts. Belief in the efficacy of these remedies stems from an awareness of the natural world and formed an integral part of the ancient perceptions about male sexuality. This familiarity served as a foundation for a number of well known impotence remedies, and one particular belief system closely links certain bulbous plants, serpents, and magical stones or amulets with the phallus.

References to the stimulative properties of plants included under the general terms bolboi and bulbi appear in such diverse works as agricultural and botanical tracts, the culinary discussions of Athenaeus, Attic Comedy, Roman Elegy, and the Satyrica of Petronius. Garlic and onions (Amaryllis Family), because of visual associations with the male organ, were especially prized; so also were a number of species from the Arum Family. In each case the swollen and elongated appearance of the flower structure contributed to a commonly held belief in the efficacy of these plants for curing male sexual failure.

Observations of the visual and behavioral characteristics of animals, especially the slender appearance and the sinuous sidelong movements of lizards and serpents, linked them with male sexuality in the ancient mind. In the case of serpents it is their perceived ability to rejuvenate themselves by sloughing the skin that came to connect them closely with the sexual functions of the male organ. Serpents' venom, moreover, in partaking of the cooling qualities of deadening poisons, was perceived as the kind of magical substance that could bring about the paralysis of impotence. As a result, plants like those mentioned above with visual associations with both the male organ and serpents, were often considered as particularly stimulative because of the heating qualities they possessed as this was also thought to promote male sexual arousal.

In the associative relationship of plants and serpents sympathetic magic also played a significant role, and the essence of this influence was considered readily transferrable to objects. In particular the efficacy of magically charged stones and amulets such as ophites, highly praised in the Orphic Lithica for its stimulative properties, is based on both visual features and other perceived interconnections with serpents and serpent-like plants. The ability to manipulate the powers of these objects also became a specific source of empowerment for those who availed themselves of these sexually and socially reintegrative properties.

In the literary sphere an understanding of a belief system of this kind can inform the interpretation of several well known texts. Vegetable imagery appears in Catullus c.67 in describing an impotent male, and Horace's Epode 3 has a sexual subtext derived from the close association of garlic with male sexuality. The wide range of social concerns and accepted cures for impotence appear in Ovid Amores 3.7 while the numerous attempts by Encolpius in the Satyrica to remedy his impotence stand as evidence for commonly held perceptions about the efficacy of traditional remedies.


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