Apollo Magazine

A lot of love making, Your Honour

A copy of Lady Chatterley’s Lover once owned by the judge who presided over the novel’s obscenity trial is up for auction

GettyImages-170131757 Lady Chatterley’s cover: a commuter on the London Underground reads Lawrence the day after his novel was cleared of obscenity in 1960. Photo by Fox Photos/Hulton Archive/Getty Images

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‘Is it a book that you would even wish your wife or your servants to read?’ Rakewell’s readers will likely be familiar with those infamous words from the obscenity trial of Lady Chatterley’s Lover in 1960. What might not be commonly known is the fact that the presiding judge, Sir Lawrence Byrne, had reason to shift in his seat a little at that point in the prosecution’s preliminary address. As an upcoming sale of the judge’s copy of D.H. Lawrence’s novel reveals, his wife had not only read it (good God!), but made marginal notes for her husband, underlining the sexually explicit passages. On the Central Criminal Court’s headed stationery, Lady Byrne had also helpfully scribbled a cheat-sheet of significant moments in the novel, adding damning commentary such as ‘love making’ and ‘coarse’.

Included with lot 159 (estimate £10,000-15,000) in Sotheby’s A Private View sale on 30 October is also a blue-grey damask bag, thought to have been specially stitched by Lady Byrne so that His Honour could carry the offending opus into court undetected. It puts Rakewell in mind of what the Kindle did for bashful readers of Fifty Shades of Grey. But times have happily moved on: no need, as there was for Lady Chatterley, to try the quality of E.L. James’s prose to establish literary merit before allowing publication. Lucky, that.

Got a story for Rakewell? Get in touch at rakewell@apollomag.com or via @Rakewelltweets.

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