French soldier and writer whose descriptions of sexual perversion gave rise to the term `sadism' (1740-1814)
1I'd love to hear a Sade album produced by Questlove, for example.
2It's from the de Sade name that the term sadism is derived.
3Conservatives criticised Ms Sade, who appears to have deactivated her Twitter account.
4Even at his most outrageous, Sade was not really a pornographic writer.
5Or, you may get a surprisingly gorgeous cover of a Sade classic.
6De Sade says that his name was Louis, without mentioning his cognomen.
7The legacy of torturous French writing certainly predates the likes of de Sade.
8Of course, de Sade's mother-in-law didn't like that, and she had him imprisoned.
9The source at Sade's label denied any connection to that site.
10The Marquis de Sade was at least once arrested for sodomy.
11Next, the Bardism the Marquis de Sade would have spoken, in Shakespearean language:
12In that review Wilson discussed Geoffrey Gorer's book on Sade and criticized it.
13It has been a ruinous experience, a schedule designed by Marquis de Sade.
14The Sade poster above her bed that she swore was her spitting image.
15Hence Sade's strange laughter, his wit amid the most fantastic cruelties.
16From other forms of Sade, however, the other early form of s, viz.