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‘Christine Poulson’s wonderful sense of place brings Cambridge to life. Cassie overcomes the problems facing her with wit and guile aplenty and ensures the reader’s empathy from first word to last . . . an enthralling and engaging read that underlines Christine’s burgeoning reputation as a crime novelist to watch.’ [Stage Fright]

- SHOTS MAGAZINE

How I learned about love and sex in the sixties

Information was not easy to come by at my Girls’ Grammar School. Biology lessons focused mainly how rabbits reproduced and raised more questions than they answered. At one point there was a book in a plain brown wrapper (yes, really!), called something like Married Love, though I don’t think it can have been exactly that. It was in illicit circulation, and I certainly saw it, but I can’t remember anything about its contents. And then there was Lady Chatterley’s Lover – this was the end of the sixties – which also circulated surreptitiously.

But looking back it seems to me that I learnt a lot from The Oxford Book of English Verse 1250-1918. My copy was the 1939 edition, chosen and edited by Sir Arthur-Quiller Couch. It had been my mother’s school prize and had the stamp of Staveley Grammar School on the cover. Did they know what was inside it? It was full of wonderful love poetry. ‘Western wind, when will thou blow / The small rain down can rain / Christ, if my love were in my arms / And I in my bed again!’ It was all there: Wyatt, Donne, Marvell’s ‘To His Coy Mistress,’ the Cavalier Poets, Browning, Tennyson and what amazingly sexy stuff some of it was. And there was quite a bit of information, too, if you knew where to look. Today’s youth just don’t know what they are missing.

4 Comments

  1. moira @ Clothes in Books
    December 11, 2014

    Love this, and so agree with you. ‘Western Wind’ is one of the greatest four lines in all poetry, and the unadorned emotion of poetry is unmatchable.

    Reply
    • Christine Poulson
      December 15, 2014

      Yes, ‘Western Wind’ is wonderful. And what about Wyatt’s ‘They flee from me that did me seek.’ So sexy – and sad, too.

      Reply
  2. Susan D
    December 16, 2014

    Well, it could well have been Married Love, by Marie Stopes
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Married_Love

    And you’ve forgotten it? :^)

    Reply
    • Christine Poulson
      December 16, 2014

      Thanks, Susan. I think it was a more up-to-date version, but it is interesting that it made so little impression on me!

      Reply

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