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Lady C by Guy Cuthbertson review – how Lady Chatterley’s Lover rocked Britain | DH Lawrence

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Not known for his humour, DH Lawrence thought of Lady Chatterley’s Lover as a serious novel about the sacred nature of sex. But some of the activity between Connie and the gamekeeper Mellors is funny, either unintentionally (as in the scene where they garland each other’s naked bodies with flowers) or with a playful recognition of carnal absurdity: his penis is “farcical” and intercourse involves a “ridiculous bouncing of buttocks”. More comic still was the fallout from the book: customs officers seizing banned copies, high court jinks, innumerable skits and cartoons. As Guy Cuthbertson shows in his entertaining book, “It’s not a comic novel as such, but one way or another, it created laughter.”

On a steam railway in Devon, you can ride in a carriage called Lady Chatterley. Boots, blouses, thongs, earrings, pens, postcards and saris also bear her name and there have been endless jokey variations on the title: Lady Chatterley’s Pullover, Lady Chatterley’s Loofah, Lady Loverley’s Chatter and so on. Allusions to the novel turn up everywhere from lonely hearts ads to fancy dress parades. And as John Profumo and David Mellor discovered, if you were caught with your pants down in a sex scandal there’d be jokes about the new moral decrepitude that followed the unbanning of the book.

The biggest sniggers came during the trial itself, in 1960 – Regina v Penguin Books – when Mervyn Griffith-Jones, for the crown, asked: “Is it a book that you would even wish your wife or your servants to read?” The 35 witnesses for the defence, graded A to D in terms of their potential impact, were an impressive bunch, including EM Forster, Rebecca West and the Bishop of Woolwich, with English lecturer Richard Hoggart the star performer. The prosecution didn’t call on any writers, though Evelyn Waugh and Enid Blyton were in favour of the ban. To assist their judgment, members of the jury spent a pre-trial week in armchairs at the Old Bailey reading the book, with morning coffee provided. The judge’s inclination was for a guilty verdict but they defied him. Some 400 people queued outside Foyles in London before the shop opened on the first day of sales. The paperback quickly sold 2 million copies.

Among those in the gallery at the trial was Sylvia Plath, who’d bought an expurgated copy as a student and, after marrying Ted Hughes, confided to her diary that she was a woman living “with her own gamekeeper” (Hughes had indeed once wanted to be a gamekeeper, just as his brother Gerald became). How far the novel influenced her work and thinking isn’t clear but, as Cuthbertson shows, it did leave its mark on George Orwell’s fiction and on Stella Gibbons’s Cold Comfort Farm. Philip Larkin thought it a “grand” book (“parts of it made me laugh deeply”) and, whereas some librarians refused to stock it even after the trial, he organised a special exhibition to celebrate its release.

Entertainers of all kinds were drawn to Lady C. Screaming Lord Sutch recited extracts on his pirate radio station. David Bowie named it one of his favourite books and wore red trousers, just as Mellors recommended. Jimmy Edwards chose it on Desert Island Discs. The novel was alluded to in Mad Men, featured in a song by Tom Lehrer (who rhymes it with “philately”), and drew everyone from Joanna Lumley to Sylvia “Emmanuelle” Kristel to appear in film versions. Only the magazine Field and Stream failed to share the enthusiasm, finding the book deficient as a guide to gamekeeping.

Deeply English though the setting is, with class division and industrial blight among its themes, the novel caused controversy worldwide. In the US, it was debated in the Senate. In Japan, the translator Itō Sei was found guilty of obscenity. In Egypt, the wife of King Farouk kept a paperback copy by her bed. My mother did the same, tucking it away in a bedside cabinet that I secretly raided in my teens. You could be teased or shamed for reading “the dirty bits”. People hid it in plain brown covers or inside more wholesome books.

What might offend readers today isn’t the sexual candour and use of four-letter words, but Mellors’s doom-laden and homophobic philosophising. Connie’s antisemitism too: “You only bully with your money like any Jew,” she tells her husband, whose disability has also caused upset. If Lawrence wished to emphasise Clifford’s weakness and impotence, couldn’t he have done it less objectionably than by putting him in a wheelchair?

Guy Cuthbertson has been a diligent researcher, spending many hours trawling through archives and cuttings. He has even looked through the trial judge’s copy of the book, with its highlighting of rude words. If he underplays the significance of Kate Millett’s attack on the novel’s phallocentrism, that’s because he’s keeping things light. After all the heavy moralising that went with the book, it’s the right way to go. He has produced an enjoyable piece of social history, less earnest Leavisite sermonising than saucy Ealing Studios comedy.

Lady C: The Long, Sensational Life of Lady Chatterley’s Lover by Guy Cuthbertson is published by Yale (£20). To support the Guardian, order your copy at guardianbookshop.com. Delivery charges may apply.



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Australia v Netherlands: Women’s T20 World Cup 2026 – live | Women’s T20 World Cup 2026

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Key events

Netherlands XI

1. Heather Siegers

2. Phebe Molkenboer

3. Babette de Leede (c) (wk)

4. Sterre Kalis

5. Robine Rijke

6. Frederique Overdijk

7. Iris Zwilling

8. Myrthe van den Raad

9. Silver Siegers

10. Caroline de Lange

11. Isabel van der Woning

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What we know so far about Bedford train crash

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Two East Midland Railway trains crashed into each other, injuring dozens of passengers and crew.



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David Guetta and Sia’s song Titanium got me through my fertility treatment | Dance music

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At the end of 2011, party season was under way but I was in no mood for festivities. Two years into fertility treatment, my body was pumped full of synthetic hormones and felt like a pin cushion, while my head was filled with both the fragile hope of having a baby, and the exhaustion of failed clinical attempts to do so.

I was in my late 20s. I met my husband when I was 22; we got married when I was 25. “I want to have kids young,” I’d told him. It was a feeling I’d harboured since my teenage years. But I’d also had the nagging sense that it might not come easily to me. As it turned out, my intuition was right. Approaching 28, I was a regular on the infertility merry-go-round.

I was recovering from my second miscarriage that year when I heard Sia’s raspy voice on the car radio belting out words that sounded emotionally weighty for an electronic dance number – her David Guetta collaboration, Titanium.

It’s not a song I would have necessarily rated or listened to again – I’m more likely to play 00s R&B and hip-hop – but it came at the perfect time in my life. I had forgotten how days felt before fertility drugs and the diarised cycles of administering them. I’d been constantly wearing a brave face and cramming in hospital appointments before and after work, going about my job through a fog of longing and hormones. It had left me in a “cry on the bedroom floor” kind of a heap. I needed something to drag the hope back into me.

I turned the radio up and listened to the lyrics: “I’m bulletproof, nothing to lose / Fire away, fire away.” It felt as if it was talking to and about me, issuing a riposte to all those shots of disappointment that had been fired our way. As Sia’s vocals ascended through the chorus with Guetta’s soaring synths – “Ricochet, you take your aim” – I cried, but I felt myself gaining power with her, too. “You shoot me down, but I won’t fall / I am titanium.” Those were the words I needed to hear.

I felt like a puppet pulled upright again. I streamed it on repeat in the days that followed. I might not have been able to face the work Christmas party but I wasn’t going to languish on the bedroom floor any more.

Over the next months, I spent a lot of time in my car, travelling to work and to fertility appointments to get my blood tested, hormones measured or insides scanned. Listening to Titanium became routine. Each time, its cinematic surge had the same empowering effect and I’d turn up the volume, wind down the windows and defiantly sing along in my terrible voice so it could wash over me.

The following May, when my husband and I headed to the clinic for another IVF embryo transfer, I let it motivate me; when we drove back from scans confirming we were six weeks, then 12 weeks pregnant, I celebrated with it. As I nervously made my way through my pregnancy, I turned to it when I needed the boost.

In January 2013, our first son was born. Today, he is the eldest of three: his brother arrived 15 months later, via IVF too (the last of our fertilised embryos) and four years later, another brother, without fertility treatment. We consider ourselves unspeakably lucky; for many, the outcome is not the same.

In our family, everyone knows Titanium is my fight song. It’s the only big commercial dance hit on my playlists, and a marker of something I overcame.

My kids call me in whenever it streams or plays on TV. When I made my husband a playlist for our 15th wedding anniversary, it’s the song that represented our 2011. And the other week, when he was out with friends, he sent me a voice note from the bar: he’d recorded it playing in the background.

There’s something all-consuming about fertility treatment: you view life only through the filter of your efforts to get pregnant. If you’re lucky, the filter lifts. It did for me, but the fight song remained. So, now, elsewhere in life, when I need a shot of strength and find myself alone in the car, down goes the window and on it goes.



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