【2021 Archives】
Roger That
Best of 2015
We’re away until January 4, but we’re re-posting some of our favorite pieces from 2015. Please enjoy, and have a happy New Year!

Hans Hysing’s portrait of Byrd, ca. 1724.
The complicated sex drive of William Byrd II.
William Byrd II was a colonial Virginia gentleman who, on occasion, was no gentleman at all. Writing about himself in the third person, in 1723, he bemoaned “the combustible manner in his constitution”; he cursed the innate passions that “broke out upon him before his beard,” making him a “swain” before all women. Byrd’s carnal drive underscored the eyebrow-raising vigor of his lust. On a trip to London in 1719, according to his secret diary, he “rogered”—an easy enough euphemism—no fewer than six women in nine days. Of one woman, he (proudly) recorded having “rogered her three times” in a single evening. That same night, Byrd, aged forty-four, noted with a tinge of sadness that he had “neglected my prayers.”
When he wasn’t on a whore-chasing jag in the metropolis, Byrd was back on his Virginia estate, called Westover, with his wife, Lucy. At Westover, his sexual proclivities certainly raged with similar, singleminded intensity—he wrote in his diary about having urgent sex with Lucy on a billiards table—but it was also tempered by a healthy desire to achieve mutual pleasure with her. He was just as inclined to “give my wife a flourish”—bring her to orgasm—as he was to “roger” her, a semantic shift suggesting that Lucy’s response to their sexual union mattered as much to Byrd as his own physical gratification. On April 30, 1711, he noted in his diary that although he discovered his wife in a “melancholy” mood, the “powerful flourish” he delivered filled her with “great ecstasy and refreshment.” He recalled one morning during which “I lay in my wife’s arms” while, during another, his wife “kept me so long in bed” that “I rogered her.” That evening he got around to saying his prayers—before rogering her again. The man could be a virtuous, even tender, Tidewater lover when he wasn’t being a London sleazebag. Read More >>
Search
Categories
Latest Posts
Operation Rock Wallaby rains food down on wildlife hurt by bushfires
2025-06-26 14:34Lost Gloves, Strange Gloves, and Other Gloves
2025-06-26 14:08Photos from Canada’s Alcatraz
2025-06-26 14:066 features iPhone 15 stole from Pixel 7
2025-06-26 13:23Episode 4: The Wave of the Future
2025-06-26 12:29Popular Posts
The State of PC Gaming in 2016
2025-06-26 14:21Behold: The Splendor of a French Waiter
2025-06-26 14:09The Bawdy, Lovely Verse of the Earl of Rochester
2025-06-26 14:04Best JBL deal: Save $80 on JBL Xtreme 4 portable speaker
2025-06-26 13:35Featured Posts
Commissioning Misleading Core i9
2025-06-26 14:33“She's Not Gone,” a Poem By Philip Levine
2025-06-26 14:15Remembering the Alma Mahler Doll in All Its Creepiness
2025-06-26 13:37How This Long
2025-06-26 12:29Popular Articles
The Mismeasure of Media
2025-06-26 14:233 new iOS 17 features that dropped this week
2025-06-26 13:42How a New Movie Sparked a Confused Quest for the Iliad
2025-06-26 13:14The 1933 Novel That Scandalized Denmark
2025-06-26 13:13Trump's new tariff plan spares some smartphones, laptops
2025-06-26 12:20Newsletter
Subscribe to our newsletter for the latest updates.
Comments (5616)
Exploration Information Network
Then and Now: 6 Generations of GeForce Graphics Compared
2025-06-26 14:47New Knowledge Information Network
iPhone 16 rumors that'll make you skip the iPhone 15
2025-06-26 14:10Highlight Information Network
Djordje Ozbolt’s “More Paintings About Poets and Food”
2025-06-26 13:54Style Information Network
MrBeast 'Squid Game' re
2025-06-26 13:09Impression Information Network
Amazon Big Spring Sale 2025: Best Apple deals on iPads, MacBooks, and more still live
2025-06-26 12:16