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Brunette Coleman

Brunette Coleman was a pseudonym used by the poet and writer Philip Larkin. In 1943, towards the end of his time as an undergraduate at St John's College, Oxford, he wrote several works of fiction, verse and critical commentary under that name, including homoerotic stories that parody the style of popular writers of contemporary girls' school fiction.

Idealised illustration of an early 20th-century English schoolgirl

The Coleman oeuvre consists of a completed novella, Trouble at Willow Gables, set in a girls' boarding school; an incomplete sequel, Michaelmas Term at St Brides, set in a women's college at Oxford; seven short poems with a girls' school ambience; a fragment of pseudo-autobiography; and a critical essay purporting to be Coleman's literary apologia. The manuscripts were stored in the Brynmor Jones Library at the University of Hull, where Larkin was chief librarian between 1955 and 1985. Their existence was revealed to the public when Larkin's Selected Letters and Andrew Motion's biography were published in 1992 and 1993 respectively. The Coleman works themselves were finally published, with other Larkin drafts and oddments, in 2002.

At Oxford Larkin underwent a period of confused sexuality and limited literary output. The adoption of a female persona appeared to release his creativity, as in the three years following the Coleman phase he published under his own name two novels and his first poetry collection. Thereafter, although he gradually established his reputation as a poet, his career as a prose writer declined, and despite several attempts he completed no further fiction. Critical reaction to the publication of the Coleman material was divided between those who saw no value in these juvenilia, and those who considered that they cast useful light on the study of the mature Larkin.

Origins Edit

 
The quadrangle, St John's College, Oxford

In October 1940 Philip Larkin began studying English at St John's College, Oxford.[1] A prolific writer since childhood, his primary ambition as an undergraduate was to be a novelist rather than a poet.[2] As well as publishing articles and poems in Cherwell and Oxford Poetry, he wrote additional unpublished material that included fragments of semi-autobiographical stories exploring homosexual relationships among groups of undergraduates. According to Larkin's biographer Andrew Motion these writings, while of no literary value, give an indication of Larkin's confused sexuality at that time, and his growing distaste for what he terms "this buggery business".[3]

From 1942 the character of much of Larkin's private writing changed, as a result of his friendship with a fellow undergraduate from St John's, Kingsley Amis, who arrived at the university that summer.[4] Amis, a much more confident and assertive character than Larkin, disguised his serious concerns behind a facade of jokes and comic ironies. Larkin soon adopted that style as his own, joining with Amis in composing obscene rhymes and parodies of the Romantic poets they were required to study.[5] In time they extended their efforts to soft-porn fantasies in which, typically, "girls roll[ed] around together twanging elastic and straps".[6] After Amis's departure for the army in early 1943, Larkin made his first attempt at writing from a specifically feminine perspective in a story called "An Incident in the English Camp", which he subtitled "A Thoroughly Unhealthy Story". Lacking any salacious content despite its subtitle, the work is written in a pastiche of sentimental women's magazine prose. It depicts an undergraduate girl's parting from her soldier lover, and ends: "She walked in exaltation through the black streets, her heart glowing like a coal with deep love".[7]

Writing Edit

From his general reading, Larkin had acquired a considerable knowledge of girls' school fiction, and had formed definite views on the authors of such works: "stupid women without a grain of humour in their minds", who lacked "erotic sensibility" and treated the lesbian perspective "too casually".[8] His intention to write in this genre is expressed in a letter to his friend Norman Iles, dated 5 June 1943, just before Larkin sat his degree Finals: "I am spending my time doing an obscene Lesbian novel in the form of a school story".[9] The novel was Trouble at Willow Gables, a school adventure story in the manner of Dorita Fairlie Bruce or Dorothy Vicary, which Larkin completed at home while awaiting his Finals results. That was the prelude to a busy summer's writing: "Leaving Oxford was like taking a cork out of a bottle. Writing flooded out of me", Larkin later told his biographer.[10]

Larkin's letter to Iles does not mention a female pseudonym, although the idea of using one had been in his mind for months. The previous March he had begun writing the imagined autobiography of a supposed lady novelist, "Brunette Coleman", adapting the name of a well-known contemporary female jazz musician, Blanche Coleman.[11] Larkin tentatively titled the autobiography "Ante Meridian"; he soon abandoned it, but held on to the Coleman name. According to James Booth, who prepared the Coleman texts for publication in 2002, the adoption of a female persona was in line with the pose of "girlish narcissism" that Larkin was affecting in the summer of 1943: "I am dressed in red trousers, shirt and white pullover, and look very beautiful".[12] In his letters to Amis, Larkin maintained a straight-faced pretence that Coleman was a real person. Thus in one letter he wrote "Brunette is very thrilled" with a poem written in her name, and in another, "Brunette can stand healthy criticism".[13]

As he waited for offers of employment through the summer and autumn of 1943, Larkin added more works to the Coleman oeuvre. He began a sequel to Trouble at Willow Gables, set in a women's college at Oxford and entitled Michaelmas Term at St Bride's, but did not finish it: "All literary inspiration has deserted me", he informed Amis on 13 August.[14] Nevertheless, a week later he told Amis that Brunette was helping him to write a novel, provisionally entitled Jill, about "a young man who invents an imaginary sister, and falls in love with her". With this letter Larkin sent a Coleman poem, "Bliss", the first of seven written in the girls' school idiom.[15] As late as 19 October he reported to Amis that "Brunette is working on a little monograph about girls' school stories".[16] This is a reference to the putative literary manifesto "What Are We Writing For", which became the final Coleman work. Thereafter, Motion records, she disappeared, "to be mentioned only fleetingly in later accounts of his university life ... She ended up as an occasional comic reminder of lost youth".[17]

Works Edit

The works which Larkin attributed to Brunette Coleman comprise a short piece of supposed autobiography, a complete short novel, an incomplete second novel, a collection of poems and a literary essay.

"Ante Meridian" Edit

This fragment of spoof autobiography is distinct from the rest of the Coleman oeuvre in having no relation to girls' school fiction. It records Brunette's early life as the daughter of an eccentric priest, brought up in a tumbledown Cornish cliff-top house.[6] Apart from descriptions of the house and its contents (some of which may be drawn from Larkin's own childhood home in Coventry),[18] much of the narrative is taken up with a comical description of an attempt to launch the local lifeboat. Larkin's biographer Richard Bradford is struck by the distinctive tone in the fragment, different from anything else written under Coleman's name.[18] The text breaks off suddenly; Motion surmises that Larkin abandoned it because he was eager to begin work on the first Coleman novel.[6] Booth describes the prose as "a mix of Daphne du Maurier nostalgia and surreal farce".[7]

Novel: Trouble at Willow Gables Edit

Synopsis Edit

 
Emotional friendships between girls are characteristic of Brunette Coleman's school fiction.

Marie Moore, a junior pupil at Willow Gables, receives a birthday present of £5 from an aunt. After the banknote is retained for safekeeping by the headmistress, Miss Holden, Marie slyly recovers it but is quickly found out, and is coerced by Miss Holden into giving the money to the school's gymnasium fund. When later the banknote goes missing from the fund's collection box, Marie is suspected, but protests her innocence despite a savage beating from Miss Holden with assistance from two burly school prefects. Only her friend Myfanwy believes her. Confined in the school's punishment room, Marie manages to escape with the help of a domestic servant, and runs away.

Hilary Russell, a prefect and predatory lesbian, lusts after Mary Beech, the school's cricket captain. On a night expedition in pursuit of Mary, Hilary catches Margaret Tattenham, a junior, in the act of replacing the £5 note in Miss Holden's room. Margaret says she originally took the money as a prank; Hilary agrees not to report her to Miss Holden in return for sexual favours, to which Margaret reluctantly consents. The following morning, Hilary denounces her anyway; Margaret responds by revealing Hilary's sexual harassment but is not believed, and is taken to the punishment room where Marie's absence is revealed.

Hilary is sent with a search party to find the missing girl. Meanwhile, Margaret makes a daring escape via the window, and rides off on the school horse. She finds Marie, who is miserable and frightened and wants to return to the school whatever the consequences. Margaret confesses that she borrowed the £5 to bet on a horse, and has won £100. She means to leave Willow Gables for good, and apologises to Marie for the trouble she has caused her. This conversation is overheard by Hilary's search party, and after a scuffle the truants are captured. On the way back to school they hear cries from the river; it is Myfanwy, who has got into difficulties while swimming. Margaret frees herself from her captors' clutches, dives in and saves her drowning friend.

Back at the school, Miss Holden overlooks the theft in view of Margaret's heroism, although she confiscates the £100 winnings and donates the money to a new swimming pool fund. Marie is exonerated, and her £5 is returned. Mary Beech comes forward to corroborate Margaret's accusations against Hilary, who is summarily expelled. Marie and Myfanwy enjoy an emotional reunion in the school sickroom, as life at the school returns to normal, with friendship and forgiveness all round.

Commentary Edit

The typescript begins with a dedication page "To Jacinth" (Brunette Coleman's imagined secretary). There follows an untitled poem which later appears, slightly altered, as "The School in August" in Sugar and Spice, the Coleman poetry collection. In the story the surnames of the headmistress and principal girls have been altered in ink throughout the typescript; some of the original names belonged to Larkin's real-life acquaintances at Oxford. The presence of a publisher's inkstamp on the wallet containing the typescript indicates that the story may have been submitted by Larkin for publication.[19]

Booth argues that, whatever Larkin's motive in writing it, the story follows the parameters of schoolgirl fiction with some fidelity. Its main characters all have models within the genre; Marie has much in common with Dorita Fairlie Bruce's recurrent character "Dimsie", while Hilary is likewise based on Dorothy Vicary's villainous "Una Vickers" in Niece of the Headmistress. The usual themes of friendships, rivalries and injustices are explored, and the ending in reconciliation and future hope is entirely true to type.[8] Some scenes—the savage beating endured by Marie, the lingering descriptions of girls dressing and undressing, Hilary's smouldering sexuality—may, Booth asserts, be written with "the lusts of the male heterosexual gaze" in mind but, he continues, the reader looking for explicit pornography will be disappointed.[20] Bradford notes three prose styles combining in the narrative: "cautious indifference, archly overwritten symbolism ... and ... its writer's involuntary feelings of sexual excitement".[21] Motion finds the tone of the prose frivolous on the surface, yet fundamentally cold and cruel: "Once its women have been arraigned for pleasure they are dismissed; once they have been enjoyed they are treated with indifference".[22]

Novel: Michaelmas Term at St Bride's Edit

Synopsis Edit

 
Somerville College, Oxford, the recognisable model for St Bride's

In this incomplete story Mary, Marie, Margaret and Myfanwy, friends from Willow Gables, are new undergraduates at St Bride's College, Oxford. Mary is disconcerted to find that she is sharing her rooms with Hilary, her old adversary from the school. However, although Hilary still has a roving lesbian eye, she has lost most of her predatory instincts and the two become friends. Mary falls foul of Mary de Putron, the aggressive and authoritarian college games captain; in the hockey trials de Putron makes Mary play out of her normal position, so that performs badly. Hilary subsequently avenges Mary's humiliation by seducing de Putron's boyfriend, a gauche Royal Air Force officer called Clive, whom she then dumps unceremoniously.

Of Myfanwy's doings we learn relatively little. Margaret, still fascinated with horse-racing, sets up her own bookmaking business. Marie discovers psychoanalysis and tries to cure her sister Philippa's leather belt fetish. After various efforts prove unsuccessful, the sisters seek solace in alcohol. The later stages of the story introduce Larkin's real-life friend, Diana Gollancz, and recount her preparations for a fashionable party. In the final scenes the narrative becomes surreal, as on their alcoholic quest Marie and Philippa are confronted by the knowledge that they are characters in a story, while "real life" is going on in the next room. Marie takes a peep at real life, and decides she would rather stay in the story, which breaks off at this point with a few pencil notes indicating possible ways in which it might have continued.

Commentary Edit

Only the first dozen pages of the manuscript are typed; the remainder is handwritten. The surnames of the characters, which were changed in Trouble at Willow Gables, are unaltered. The script carries a dedication to "Miriam and Diana": Miriam was an acquaintance with whom Larkin had discussed lesbian relationships, while Diana Gollancz ("Diana G." in the story), the daughter of the publisher Victor Gollancz, supplied him with many anecdotes from her schooldays.[23][24] According to Motion, "St Bride's" is recognisably based on Somerville College, Oxford.[25]

In his analysis of the Coleman fiction, Stephen Cooper notes that, as with Willow Gables, the narrative voice switches from character to character so that different thoughts, attitudes and perspectives can be expressed.[26] Cooper argues that as the narrative progresses, Larkin's concerns (in his Coleman voice) move beyond sexual titillation; he is no longer interested in describing lesbian encounters in voyeuristic detail.[27] Hilary emerges as saviour rather than seducer, as a campaigner against male oppression, and as a figure who "deviates from the cultural norms [yet] can triumph over those who adopt conventional attitudes".[28] The scenes with sexual content or innuendo are largely confined to the earlier parts of the story. The later parts, which introduce the male characters "Clive" and Hilary's other admirer, the contemptible "Creature" are, according to Motion, overlaid with male self-disgust, a theme apparent in Larkin's two published novels and in his later poetry. Motion suggests that the loss of erotic impetus, and Larkin's apparent fading of interest, are the main reasons why the story peters out.[25]

Sugar and Spice: A Sheaf of Poems Edit

The typescript of Sugar and Spice consists of six poems, which in sequence are:

  1. "The False Friend"
  2. "Bliss"
  3. "Femmes Damnées"
  4. "Ballade des Dames du Temps Jadis"
  5. "Holidays"
  6. "The School in August"

A seventh poem in pencil, "Fourth Form Loquitur", has been loosely inserted into the typescript.[29] "Femmes Damnées", which was printed by John Fuller at the Sycamore Press, Oxford, in 1978, is the only Coleman work published in Larkin's lifetime.[30] This poem, and "The School in August", were included in Larkin's Collected Poems published in 1988;[31] "The School in August" was omitted from the 2003 revised edition of the collection although, according to Amis, it is the poem that best gives the flavour of the Coleman pastiche.[32] "Bliss" was included in Larkin's Selected Letters (1992), as part of a letter to Amis.[33]

Motion describes the Coleman poems as "a world of comfortless jealousies, breathless bike-rides and deathless crushes", mixing elements from writers and poets such as Angela Brazil, Richmal Crompton, John Betjeman and W.H. Auden. Larkin's own attitude to these poems appears equivocal. He expresses pleasure that his friend Bruce Montgomery liked them, especially "The School in August".[34] However, to Amis he writes: "I think all wrong-thinking people ought to like them. I used to write them whenever I'd seen any particularly ripe schoolgirl ... Writing about grown women is less perverse and therefore less satisfying".[35] Booth finds the poems the most impressive of all the Coleman works, in their evidence of Larkin's early ability to create striking and moving images from conventional school story clichés. They are an early demonstration of Larkin's talent for finding depths in ordinariness, an ability that characterised many of his later poems. Booth draws specific attention to the elegiac quality of the final lines of "The School in August": "And even swimming groups can fade / Games mistresses turn grey". In Booth's view the Coleman poems are among the best Larkin wrote in the 1940s, well beyond anything in his first published selection The North Ship (1945).[36]

"What Are We Writing For" Edit

The typescript of the essay is headed by an epigraph, attributed to The Upbringing of Daughters by Catherine Durning Whethem. It reads: "The chief justification of reading books of any sort is the enlargement of experience that should accrue therefrom".[37] The text which follows is, in Motion's words, "a homily on how and how not to write for children".[38] It argues for the need for well-drawn heroines, and for unrepentant villainesses: "To be tenacious in evil is the duty of every villain ... Let her hate the heroine wholeheartedly, and refuse, yes, even on the last page, to take her hand in forgiveness". The story should not be about schoolgirls, but about a school with girls in it. The school must be English; foreign settings or trips abroad are disparaged. Larkin, in Coleman's voice, pleads for "the Classic Unities": Unity of Place, which is the school and its inhabitants; Unity of Time, normally the term in which the action occurs; and Unity of Action, whereby every recorded incident contributes in some way to the telling of the story. The essay is laden with quotations from many writers of the genre, among them Joy Francis, Dorita Fairlie Bruce, Elsie J. Oxenham, Elinor Brent-Dyer and Nancy Breary.[39]

Motion argues that aside from the sometimes facetious tone, the opinions expressed by Larkin in his Coleman persona, particularly the mild xenophobia that enters the essay, foreshadow his own mature prejudices.[17] Bradford believes that the essay reads as a serious, well-researched paper on the genre of early twentieth century boarding school literature, worthy of inclusion in F. W. Bateson's Essays and Criticism had that journal existed in 1943.[18]

Critical reception Edit

 
Andrew Motion, Larkin's biographer, who made public the existence of the "Brunette Coleman" works

Shortly before his death in 1985 Larkin instructed his companion Monica Jones to burn his diaries. His instructions did not cover other writings, therefore the Coleman material remained in the archives of the Brynmor Jones Library at the University of Hull, where Larkin had worked as chief librarian since 1955.[40] The existence of these papers was first made public in 1992, when Larkin's Selected Letters was published. In the following year extensive extracts from the Coleman works appeared in Motion's biography of Larkin, and became the subject of literary analysis by M. W. Rowe, in his 1999 essay "Unreal Girls: Lesbian Fantasy in Early Larkin". Rowe saw Larkin's adoption of a female persona as an outlet, compensating for his sexual awkwardness and lack of success with Oxford women.[41] The punishment scenes, in which women punish women, were a means of subduing Larkin's feelings of anger and frustration with his personal sexual failures.[42] More significantly, according to Rowe, Larkin's invention of Coleman was the catalyst which broke the writing block that had afflicted him for most of his Oxford years.[43] The few months of her creative life in 1943 were, Larkin later acknowledged, the prelude to "the intensest time of my life"; in the three subsequent years his poetry collection The North Ship and his novels Jill and A Girl in Winter were published.[44]

The complete Coleman material, in a collection edited by James Booth, was finally published in 2002. Booth thought that the material would probably cause "a huge amount of confusion and smoke because the politically correct brigade will jump on it".[45] Anticipating the publication, Emma Hartley and Vanessa Thorpe in The Observer doubted the literary value of the works, citing Motion's view that the stories were "little more than mild pornography" which the mature poet would never have wished to see published.[46] On publication, Booth's collection provoked a particularly hostile reaction from The Guardian's critic Jenny Diski, whose review dismissed the Coleman writings as "drivel" and "sad ramblings", unworthy of publication or critical attention, and not even valid pornography: "Not a breast, not a clitoris is seen or mentioned." Unlike serious pornographers, "Larkin sketches a mere outline and then walks away with a snigger". Diski mocks Booth's reverential descriptions of the typescripts "as though they were slivers of the True Cross", and concludes: "Let this be a lesson, at least, to anyone who hasn't got around to chucking out the crap they wrote in their teens and early twenties."[47]

Other critics were more positive. The New Statesman's Robert Potts found the stories "entertaining and intriguing for readers familiar with their background and with the genre", and for the most part charmingly innocent, "especially when compared with the reality of boarding-school life". The evocation of adolescent homoeroticism was deliberate and playful rather than pornographic.[48] In a similar vein, Richard Canning in The Independent found the Willow Gables fiction vibrant, well-constructed and entertaining, and praised Larkin's "sly Sapphic spin".[40] In a more recent analysis Terry Castle, writing in the journal Daedalus, disagrees profoundly with the notion expressed by Adam Kirsch in The Times Literary Supplement, that the publication of the Coleman works was damaging to Larkin's reputation. On the contrary, argues Castle, "the Brunette phase speaks volumes about the paradoxical process by which Philip Larkin became 'Larkinesque'—modern English poetry's reigning bard of erotic frustration and depressive (if verse-enabling) self-deprecation".[49]

Influences Edit

The effects of Larkin's Coleman phase are clearly evident in his first novel, Jill, in which he makes copious use of Willow Gables material.[50] The novelist's protagonist, a shy Oxford undergraduate called John Kemp, invents a schoolgirl sister called Jill, initially to impress his arrogant and dismissive room-mate, Christopher Warner. Although Warner displays little interest, the non-existent "Jill" comes to obsess Kemp. He imagines her at Willow Gables School, and writes long letters to her there. In the form of a short story he details her life at the school—now located in Derbyshire rather than Wiltshire as it had been in the Coleman works.[n 1] The girls' names are different, but their speech and attitudes closely reflect those of the earlier stories. A lesbian element is introduced through Jill's fascination with the cool, detached senior girl Minerva Strachey. Kemp's fantasy is disturbed when he meets a real-life Jill, or Gillian; his attempts to match his flight of fancy to reality end in embarrassment and humiliation.[52][n 2]

Reviewing the published Coleman material, The Independent's Richard Canning suggests that the influence of these early works is often discernible in Larkin's poetry.[40] Likewise Stephen Cooper, in his 2004 book Philip Larkin: Subversive Writer, argues that the stylistic and thematic influences of Trouble at Willow Gables and Michaelmas Term at St Brides anticipate the poetry's recurrent concern with rebellion and conformity.[53] Among examples, Cooper cites Marie's refusal in Willow Gables to compromise with an unjust authority as reflecting the sentiments expressed in Larkin's poem "Places, Loved Ones" (1954).[54] The reader, says Cooper, "is invited to identify with Marie's plight in a manner that foreshadows the empathy felt for the rape victim in 'Deception'" (1950).[55] When Marie, having escaped from the school, discovers that her freedom is an illusion, she longs to return to the familiar paths. These sentiments are present in poems such as "Poetry of Departures" (1954), "Here" (1961), and "High Windows" (1967).[56]

The spirit though not the name of Brunette was briefly revived during 1945–46, when Larkin renewed his friendship with Amis. Among the stillborn projects planned by the pair was a story about two beautiful jazz-loving lesbian undergraduates. According to Booth, the "feeble plot [was] merely the excuse for lesbian scenes ... far indeed from the originality of Larkin's Brunette works of 1943".[57] Jill, completed in 1944, was finally published in October 1946 by The Fortune Press, whose eccentric proprietor Reginald Caton reportedly accepted the book without reading it.[58] Larkin was disappointed by the book's critical reception,[59] but by this time his second novel, A Girl in Winter, had been accepted by Faber and Faber, and was duly published in February 1947. It received better reviews than Jill, and achieved moderately good sales;[60] Booth calls it Larkin's "most original and adventurous experiment in fiction". It is written from the viewpoint of its main female character, Katherine, but otherwise is unrelated to the Coleman phase. Over the following years Larkin began but failed to finish several more novels, in the last of which, A New World Symphony, he returned once again to the device of a female protagonist-narrator. The novel was finally abandoned around 1954.[61]

Notes and references Edit

Notes

  1. ^ The initial page of the St Brides story gives the Willow Gables address as "near Mallerton, Wilts".[51]
  2. ^ The Willow Gables material in Jill is included between pages 116 and 152 of the 1975 Faber and Faber paperback edition, ISBN 0-571-10691-9

References

  1. ^ Motion, p. 72
  2. ^ Booth, p. vii
  3. ^ Motion, pp. 64–65
  4. ^ Motion, pp. 53–54
  5. ^ Motion, p. 58
  6. ^ a b c Motion, pp. 86–87
  7. ^ a b Booth, pp. viii–ix
  8. ^ a b Booth, pp. xii–xiii
  9. ^ Thwaite, p. 58
  10. ^ Motion, p. 106
  11. ^ Soester, Jeffrey (2 May 2008). "Obituary: Blanche Coleman". The Guardian.
  12. ^ Booth, p. xii
  13. ^ Thwaite, pp. 66 and 69
  14. ^ Thwaite, p. 62
  15. ^ Thwaite, p. 63
  16. ^ Thwaite, p. 80
  17. ^ a b Motion, p. 101
  18. ^ a b c Bradford, pp. 52–55
  19. ^ Booth, pp. 3–5
  20. ^ Booth, p. xvi
  21. ^ Bradford, p. 51
  22. ^ Motion, p. 92
  23. ^ Booth, pp. 129–30
  24. ^ Motion, p. 88
  25. ^ a b Motion, pp. 93–96
  26. ^ Cooper, pp. 23–25
  27. ^ Cooper, p. 28
  28. ^ Cooper, p. 30
  29. ^ Booth, pp. 241–52
  30. ^ Motion, p.98
  31. ^ Motion, p. 97
  32. ^ Amis, p. 55
  33. ^ Thwaite, p. 64
  34. ^ Thwaite, p. 69
  35. ^ Thwaite, p. 70
  36. ^ Booth, p. xvii
  37. ^ Booth, p. 253
  38. ^ Motion, pp. 101–02
  39. ^ Booth, pp. 255–73
  40. ^ a b c Canning, Richard (16 May 2002). "Trouble at Willow Gables and Other Fictions, Philip Larkin (edited by James Booth)". The Independent.
  41. ^ Rowe (2000), pp. 82–85
  42. ^ Rowe (2000), p. 86
  43. ^ Rowe (2000), p. 80
  44. ^ Rowe, M.W. (December 2001). "On being Brunette: Larkin's schoolgirl fiction". Critical Quarterly. 43 (4): 42–58. doi:10.1111/1467-8705.00387. (subscription required)
  45. ^ Woolcock, Nicola (23 April 2001). "Poet Larkin's lesbian tales 'reveal desire to be female'". The Daily Telegraph.
  46. ^ Hartley, Emma; Thorpe, Vanessa (22 April 2001). "How the young Philip Larkin courted Trouble at Willow Gables". The Observer.
  47. ^ Diski, Jenny (16 May 2002). "Gym slips and hockey sticks: Philip Larkin's schoolgirl stories". The Guardian.
  48. ^ Potts, Robert (13 May 2002). "Schoolgirl capers". New Statesman.
  49. ^ Castle, Terry (22 March 2007). "The lesbianism of Philip Larkin". Daedalus. 136 (2): 88–102. doi:10.1162/daed.2007.136.2.88. JSTOR 20028113. S2CID 57570694. (subscription required)
  50. ^ Bradford, p. 57
  51. ^ Booth, p. 131
  52. ^ Motion, pp. 154–56
  53. ^ Cooper, p. 6
  54. ^ Cooper, p. 10
  55. ^ Cooper, p. 14
  56. ^ Cooper, p. 23
  57. ^ Booth, pp. xxx–xxxi
  58. ^ Motion, p. 132
  59. ^ Motion, pp. 158–59
  60. ^ Motion, p. 164
  61. ^ Booth, pp. xxxvi and xli–xlii

Sources Edit

brunette, coleman, pseudonym, used, poet, writer, philip, larkin, 1943, towards, time, undergraduate, john, college, oxford, wrote, several, works, fiction, verse, critical, commentary, under, that, name, including, homoerotic, stories, that, parody, style, po. Brunette Coleman was a pseudonym used by the poet and writer Philip Larkin In 1943 towards the end of his time as an undergraduate at St John s College Oxford he wrote several works of fiction verse and critical commentary under that name including homoerotic stories that parody the style of popular writers of contemporary girls school fiction Idealised illustration of an early 20th century English schoolgirlThe Coleman oeuvre consists of a completed novella Trouble at Willow Gables set in a girls boarding school an incomplete sequel Michaelmas Term at St Brides set in a women s college at Oxford seven short poems with a girls school ambience a fragment of pseudo autobiography and a critical essay purporting to be Coleman s literary apologia The manuscripts were stored in the Brynmor Jones Library at the University of Hull where Larkin was chief librarian between 1955 and 1985 Their existence was revealed to the public when Larkin s Selected Letters and Andrew Motion s biography were published in 1992 and 1993 respectively The Coleman works themselves were finally published with other Larkin drafts and oddments in 2002 At Oxford Larkin underwent a period of confused sexuality and limited literary output The adoption of a female persona appeared to release his creativity as in the three years following the Coleman phase he published under his own name two novels and his first poetry collection Thereafter although he gradually established his reputation as a poet his career as a prose writer declined and despite several attempts he completed no further fiction Critical reaction to the publication of the Coleman material was divided between those who saw no value in these juvenilia and those who considered that they cast useful light on the study of the mature Larkin Contents 1 Origins 2 Writing 3 Works 3 1 Ante Meridian 3 2 Novel Trouble at Willow Gables 3 2 1 Synopsis 3 2 2 Commentary 3 3 Novel Michaelmas Term at St Bride s 3 3 1 Synopsis 3 3 2 Commentary 3 4 Sugar and Spice A Sheaf of Poems 3 5 What Are We Writing For 4 Critical reception 5 Influences 6 Notes and references 7 SourcesOrigins Edit nbsp The quadrangle St John s College OxfordIn October 1940 Philip Larkin began studying English at St John s College Oxford 1 A prolific writer since childhood his primary ambition as an undergraduate was to be a novelist rather than a poet 2 As well as publishing articles and poems in Cherwell and Oxford Poetry he wrote additional unpublished material that included fragments of semi autobiographical stories exploring homosexual relationships among groups of undergraduates According to Larkin s biographer Andrew Motion these writings while of no literary value give an indication of Larkin s confused sexuality at that time and his growing distaste for what he terms this buggery business 3 From 1942 the character of much of Larkin s private writing changed as a result of his friendship with a fellow undergraduate from St John s Kingsley Amis who arrived at the university that summer 4 Amis a much more confident and assertive character than Larkin disguised his serious concerns behind a facade of jokes and comic ironies Larkin soon adopted that style as his own joining with Amis in composing obscene rhymes and parodies of the Romantic poets they were required to study 5 In time they extended their efforts to soft porn fantasies in which typically girls roll ed around together twanging elastic and straps 6 After Amis s departure for the army in early 1943 Larkin made his first attempt at writing from a specifically feminine perspective in a story called An Incident in the English Camp which he subtitled A Thoroughly Unhealthy Story Lacking any salacious content despite its subtitle the work is written in a pastiche of sentimental women s magazine prose It depicts an undergraduate girl s parting from her soldier lover and ends She walked in exaltation through the black streets her heart glowing like a coal with deep love 7 Writing EditFrom his general reading Larkin had acquired a considerable knowledge of girls school fiction and had formed definite views on the authors of such works stupid women without a grain of humour in their minds who lacked erotic sensibility and treated the lesbian perspective too casually 8 His intention to write in this genre is expressed in a letter to his friend Norman Iles dated 5 June 1943 just before Larkin sat his degree Finals I am spending my time doing an obscene Lesbian novel in the form of a school story 9 The novel was Trouble at Willow Gables a school adventure story in the manner of Dorita Fairlie Bruce or Dorothy Vicary which Larkin completed at home while awaiting his Finals results That was the prelude to a busy summer s writing Leaving Oxford was like taking a cork out of a bottle Writing flooded out of me Larkin later told his biographer 10 Larkin s letter to Iles does not mention a female pseudonym although the idea of using one had been in his mind for months The previous March he had begun writing the imagined autobiography of a supposed lady novelist Brunette Coleman adapting the name of a well known contemporary female jazz musician Blanche Coleman 11 Larkin tentatively titled the autobiography Ante Meridian he soon abandoned it but held on to the Coleman name According to James Booth who prepared the Coleman texts for publication in 2002 the adoption of a female persona was in line with the pose of girlish narcissism that Larkin was affecting in the summer of 1943 I am dressed in red trousers shirt and white pullover and look very beautiful 12 In his letters to Amis Larkin maintained a straight faced pretence that Coleman was a real person Thus in one letter he wrote Brunette is very thrilled with a poem written in her name and in another Brunette can stand healthy criticism 13 As he waited for offers of employment through the summer and autumn of 1943 Larkin added more works to the Coleman oeuvre He began a sequel to Trouble at Willow Gables set in a women s college at Oxford and entitled Michaelmas Term at St Bride s but did not finish it All literary inspiration has deserted me he informed Amis on 13 August 14 Nevertheless a week later he told Amis that Brunette was helping him to write a novel provisionally entitled Jill about a young man who invents an imaginary sister and falls in love with her With this letter Larkin sent a Coleman poem Bliss the first of seven written in the girls school idiom 15 As late as 19 October he reported to Amis that Brunette is working on a little monograph about girls school stories 16 This is a reference to the putative literary manifesto What Are We Writing For which became the final Coleman work Thereafter Motion records she disappeared to be mentioned only fleetingly in later accounts of his university life She ended up as an occasional comic reminder of lost youth 17 Works EditThe works which Larkin attributed to Brunette Coleman comprise a short piece of supposed autobiography a complete short novel an incomplete second novel a collection of poems and a literary essay Ante Meridian Edit This fragment of spoof autobiography is distinct from the rest of the Coleman oeuvre in having no relation to girls school fiction It records Brunette s early life as the daughter of an eccentric priest brought up in a tumbledown Cornish cliff top house 6 Apart from descriptions of the house and its contents some of which may be drawn from Larkin s own childhood home in Coventry 18 much of the narrative is taken up with a comical description of an attempt to launch the local lifeboat Larkin s biographer Richard Bradford is struck by the distinctive tone in the fragment different from anything else written under Coleman s name 18 The text breaks off suddenly Motion surmises that Larkin abandoned it because he was eager to begin work on the first Coleman novel 6 Booth describes the prose as a mix of Daphne du Maurier nostalgia and surreal farce 7 Novel Trouble at Willow Gables Edit Synopsis Edit nbsp Emotional friendships between girls are characteristic of Brunette Coleman s school fiction Marie Moore a junior pupil at Willow Gables receives a birthday present of 5 from an aunt After the banknote is retained for safekeeping by the headmistress Miss Holden Marie slyly recovers it but is quickly found out and is coerced by Miss Holden into giving the money to the school s gymnasium fund When later the banknote goes missing from the fund s collection box Marie is suspected but protests her innocence despite a savage beating from Miss Holden with assistance from two burly school prefects Only her friend Myfanwy believes her Confined in the school s punishment room Marie manages to escape with the help of a domestic servant and runs away Hilary Russell a prefect and predatory lesbian lusts after Mary Beech the school s cricket captain On a night expedition in pursuit of Mary Hilary catches Margaret Tattenham a junior in the act of replacing the 5 note in Miss Holden s room Margaret says she originally took the money as a prank Hilary agrees not to report her to Miss Holden in return for sexual favours to which Margaret reluctantly consents The following morning Hilary denounces her anyway Margaret responds by revealing Hilary s sexual harassment but is not believed and is taken to the punishment room where Marie s absence is revealed Hilary is sent with a search party to find the missing girl Meanwhile Margaret makes a daring escape via the window and rides off on the school horse She finds Marie who is miserable and frightened and wants to return to the school whatever the consequences Margaret confesses that she borrowed the 5 to bet on a horse and has won 100 She means to leave Willow Gables for good and apologises to Marie for the trouble she has caused her This conversation is overheard by Hilary s search party and after a scuffle the truants are captured On the way back to school they hear cries from the river it is Myfanwy who has got into difficulties while swimming Margaret frees herself from her captors clutches dives in and saves her drowning friend Back at the school Miss Holden overlooks the theft in view of Margaret s heroism although she confiscates the 100 winnings and donates the money to a new swimming pool fund Marie is exonerated and her 5 is returned Mary Beech comes forward to corroborate Margaret s accusations against Hilary who is summarily expelled Marie and Myfanwy enjoy an emotional reunion in the school sickroom as life at the school returns to normal with friendship and forgiveness all round Commentary Edit The typescript begins with a dedication page To Jacinth Brunette Coleman s imagined secretary There follows an untitled poem which later appears slightly altered as The School in August in Sugar and Spice the Coleman poetry collection In the story the surnames of the headmistress and principal girls have been altered in ink throughout the typescript some of the original names belonged to Larkin s real life acquaintances at Oxford The presence of a publisher s inkstamp on the wallet containing the typescript indicates that the story may have been submitted by Larkin for publication 19 Booth argues that whatever Larkin s motive in writing it the story follows the parameters of schoolgirl fiction with some fidelity Its main characters all have models within the genre Marie has much in common with Dorita Fairlie Bruce s recurrent character Dimsie while Hilary is likewise based on Dorothy Vicary s villainous Una Vickers in Niece of the Headmistress The usual themes of friendships rivalries and injustices are explored and the ending in reconciliation and future hope is entirely true to type 8 Some scenes the savage beating endured by Marie the lingering descriptions of girls dressing and undressing Hilary s smouldering sexuality may Booth asserts be written with the lusts of the male heterosexual gaze in mind but he continues the reader looking for explicit pornography will be disappointed 20 Bradford notes three prose styles combining in the narrative cautious indifference archly overwritten symbolism and its writer s involuntary feelings of sexual excitement 21 Motion finds the tone of the prose frivolous on the surface yet fundamentally cold and cruel Once its women have been arraigned for pleasure they are dismissed once they have been enjoyed they are treated with indifference 22 Novel Michaelmas Term at St Bride s Edit Synopsis Edit nbsp Somerville College Oxford the recognisable model for St Bride sIn this incomplete story Mary Marie Margaret and Myfanwy friends from Willow Gables are new undergraduates at St Bride s College Oxford Mary is disconcerted to find that she is sharing her rooms with Hilary her old adversary from the school However although Hilary still has a roving lesbian eye she has lost most of her predatory instincts and the two become friends Mary falls foul of Mary de Putron the aggressive and authoritarian college games captain in the hockey trials de Putron makes Mary play out of her normal position so that performs badly Hilary subsequently avenges Mary s humiliation by seducing de Putron s boyfriend a gauche Royal Air Force officer called Clive whom she then dumps unceremoniously Of Myfanwy s doings we learn relatively little Margaret still fascinated with horse racing sets up her own bookmaking business Marie discovers psychoanalysis and tries to cure her sister Philippa s leather belt fetish After various efforts prove unsuccessful the sisters seek solace in alcohol The later stages of the story introduce Larkin s real life friend Diana Gollancz and recount her preparations for a fashionable party In the final scenes the narrative becomes surreal as on their alcoholic quest Marie and Philippa are confronted by the knowledge that they are characters in a story while real life is going on in the next room Marie takes a peep at real life and decides she would rather stay in the story which breaks off at this point with a few pencil notes indicating possible ways in which it might have continued Commentary Edit Only the first dozen pages of the manuscript are typed the remainder is handwritten The surnames of the characters which were changed in Trouble at Willow Gables are unaltered The script carries a dedication to Miriam and Diana Miriam was an acquaintance with whom Larkin had discussed lesbian relationships while Diana Gollancz Diana G in the story the daughter of the publisher Victor Gollancz supplied him with many anecdotes from her schooldays 23 24 According to Motion St Bride s is recognisably based on Somerville College Oxford 25 In his analysis of the Coleman fiction Stephen Cooper notes that as with Willow Gables the narrative voice switches from character to character so that different thoughts attitudes and perspectives can be expressed 26 Cooper argues that as the narrative progresses Larkin s concerns in his Coleman voice move beyond sexual titillation he is no longer interested in describing lesbian encounters in voyeuristic detail 27 Hilary emerges as saviour rather than seducer as a campaigner against male oppression and as a figure who deviates from the cultural norms yet can triumph over those who adopt conventional attitudes 28 The scenes with sexual content or innuendo are largely confined to the earlier parts of the story The later parts which introduce the male characters Clive and Hilary s other admirer the contemptible Creature are according to Motion overlaid with male self disgust a theme apparent in Larkin s two published novels and in his later poetry Motion suggests that the loss of erotic impetus and Larkin s apparent fading of interest are the main reasons why the story peters out 25 Sugar and Spice A Sheaf of Poems Edit The typescript of Sugar and Spice consists of six poems which in sequence are The False Friend Bliss Femmes Damnees Ballade des Dames du Temps Jadis Holidays The School in August A seventh poem in pencil Fourth Form Loquitur has been loosely inserted into the typescript 29 Femmes Damnees which was printed by John Fuller at the Sycamore Press Oxford in 1978 is the only Coleman work published in Larkin s lifetime 30 This poem and The School in August were included in Larkin s Collected Poems published in 1988 31 The School in August was omitted from the 2003 revised edition of the collection although according to Amis it is the poem that best gives the flavour of the Coleman pastiche 32 Bliss was included in Larkin s Selected Letters 1992 as part of a letter to Amis 33 Motion describes the Coleman poems as a world of comfortless jealousies breathless bike rides and deathless crushes mixing elements from writers and poets such as Angela Brazil Richmal Crompton John Betjeman and W H Auden Larkin s own attitude to these poems appears equivocal He expresses pleasure that his friend Bruce Montgomery liked them especially The School in August 34 However to Amis he writes I think all wrong thinking people ought to like them I used to write them whenever I d seen any particularly ripe schoolgirl Writing about grown women is less perverse and therefore less satisfying 35 Booth finds the poems the most impressive of all the Coleman works in their evidence of Larkin s early ability to create striking and moving images from conventional school story cliches They are an early demonstration of Larkin s talent for finding depths in ordinariness an ability that characterised many of his later poems Booth draws specific attention to the elegiac quality of the final lines of The School in August And even swimming groups can fade Games mistresses turn grey In Booth s view the Coleman poems are among the best Larkin wrote in the 1940s well beyond anything in his first published selection The North Ship 1945 36 What Are We Writing For Edit The typescript of the essay is headed by an epigraph attributed to The Upbringing of Daughters by Catherine Durning Whethem It reads The chief justification of reading books of any sort is the enlargement of experience that should accrue therefrom 37 The text which follows is in Motion s words a homily on how and how not to write for children 38 It argues for the need for well drawn heroines and for unrepentant villainesses To be tenacious in evil is the duty of every villain Let her hate the heroine wholeheartedly and refuse yes even on the last page to take her hand in forgiveness The story should not be about schoolgirls but about a school with girls in it The school must be English foreign settings or trips abroad are disparaged Larkin in Coleman s voice pleads for the Classic Unities Unity of Place which is the school and its inhabitants Unity of Time normally the term in which the action occurs and Unity of Action whereby every recorded incident contributes in some way to the telling of the story The essay is laden with quotations from many writers of the genre among them Joy Francis Dorita Fairlie Bruce Elsie J Oxenham Elinor Brent Dyer and Nancy Breary 39 Motion argues that aside from the sometimes facetious tone the opinions expressed by Larkin in his Coleman persona particularly the mild xenophobia that enters the essay foreshadow his own mature prejudices 17 Bradford believes that the essay reads as a serious well researched paper on the genre of early twentieth century boarding school literature worthy of inclusion in F W Bateson s Essays and Criticism had that journal existed in 1943 18 Critical reception Edit nbsp Andrew Motion Larkin s biographer who made public the existence of the Brunette Coleman worksShortly before his death in 1985 Larkin instructed his companion Monica Jones to burn his diaries His instructions did not cover other writings therefore the Coleman material remained in the archives of the Brynmor Jones Library at the University of Hull where Larkin had worked as chief librarian since 1955 40 The existence of these papers was first made public in 1992 when Larkin s Selected Letters was published In the following year extensive extracts from the Coleman works appeared in Motion s biography of Larkin and became the subject of literary analysis by M W Rowe in his 1999 essay Unreal Girls Lesbian Fantasy in Early Larkin Rowe saw Larkin s adoption of a female persona as an outlet compensating for his sexual awkwardness and lack of success with Oxford women 41 The punishment scenes in which women punish women were a means of subduing Larkin s feelings of anger and frustration with his personal sexual failures 42 More significantly according to Rowe Larkin s invention of Coleman was the catalyst which broke the writing block that had afflicted him for most of his Oxford years 43 The few months of her creative life in 1943 were Larkin later acknowledged the prelude to the intensest time of my life in the three subsequent years his poetry collection The North Ship and his novels Jill and A Girl in Winter were published 44 The complete Coleman material in a collection edited by James Booth was finally published in 2002 Booth thought that the material would probably cause a huge amount of confusion and smoke because the politically correct brigade will jump on it 45 Anticipating the publication Emma Hartley and Vanessa Thorpe in The Observer doubted the literary value of the works citing Motion s view that the stories were little more than mild pornography which the mature poet would never have wished to see published 46 On publication Booth s collection provoked a particularly hostile reaction from The Guardian s critic Jenny Diski whose review dismissed the Coleman writings as drivel and sad ramblings unworthy of publication or critical attention and not even valid pornography Not a breast not a clitoris is seen or mentioned Unlike serious pornographers Larkin sketches a mere outline and then walks away with a snigger Diski mocks Booth s reverential descriptions of the typescripts as though they were slivers of the True Cross and concludes Let this be a lesson at least to anyone who hasn t got around to chucking out the crap they wrote in their teens and early twenties 47 Other critics were more positive The New Statesman s Robert Potts found the stories entertaining and intriguing for readers familiar with their background and with the genre and for the most part charmingly innocent especially when compared with the reality of boarding school life The evocation of adolescent homoeroticism was deliberate and playful rather than pornographic 48 In a similar vein Richard Canning in The Independent found the Willow Gables fiction vibrant well constructed and entertaining and praised Larkin s sly Sapphic spin 40 In a more recent analysis Terry Castle writing in the journal Daedalus disagrees profoundly with the notion expressed by Adam Kirsch in The Times Literary Supplement that the publication of the Coleman works was damaging to Larkin s reputation On the contrary argues Castle the Brunette phase speaks volumes about the paradoxical process by which Philip Larkin became Larkinesque modern English poetry s reigning bard of erotic frustration and depressive if verse enabling self deprecation 49 Influences EditThe effects of Larkin s Coleman phase are clearly evident in his first novel Jill in which he makes copious use of Willow Gables material 50 The novelist s protagonist a shy Oxford undergraduate called John Kemp invents a schoolgirl sister called Jill initially to impress his arrogant and dismissive room mate Christopher Warner Although Warner displays little interest the non existent Jill comes to obsess Kemp He imagines her at Willow Gables School and writes long letters to her there In the form of a short story he details her life at the school now located in Derbyshire rather than Wiltshire as it had been in the Coleman works n 1 The girls names are different but their speech and attitudes closely reflect those of the earlier stories A lesbian element is introduced through Jill s fascination with the cool detached senior girl Minerva Strachey Kemp s fantasy is disturbed when he meets a real life Jill or Gillian his attempts to match his flight of fancy to reality end in embarrassment and humiliation 52 n 2 Reviewing the published Coleman material The Independent s Richard Canning suggests that the influence of these early works is often discernible in Larkin s poetry 40 Likewise Stephen Cooper in his 2004 book Philip Larkin Subversive Writer argues that the stylistic and thematic influences of Trouble at Willow Gables and Michaelmas Term at St Brides anticipate the poetry s recurrent concern with rebellion and conformity 53 Among examples Cooper cites Marie s refusal in Willow Gables to compromise with an unjust authority as reflecting the sentiments expressed in Larkin s poem Places Loved Ones 1954 54 The reader says Cooper is invited to identify with Marie s plight in a manner that foreshadows the empathy felt for the rape victim in Deception 1950 55 When Marie having escaped from the school discovers that her freedom is an illusion she longs to return to the familiar paths These sentiments are present in poems such as Poetry of Departures 1954 Here 1961 and High Windows 1967 56 The spirit though not the name of Brunette was briefly revived during 1945 46 when Larkin renewed his friendship with Amis Among the stillborn projects planned by the pair was a story about two beautiful jazz loving lesbian undergraduates According to Booth the feeble plot was merely the excuse for lesbian scenes far indeed from the originality of Larkin s Brunette works of 1943 57 Jill completed in 1944 was finally published in October 1946 by The Fortune Press whose eccentric proprietor Reginald Caton reportedly accepted the book without reading it 58 Larkin was disappointed by the book s critical reception 59 but by this time his second novel A Girl in Winter had been accepted by Faber and Faber and was duly published in February 1947 It received better reviews than Jill and achieved moderately good sales 60 Booth calls it Larkin s most original and adventurous experiment in fiction It is written from the viewpoint of its main female character Katherine but otherwise is unrelated to the Coleman phase Over the following years Larkin began but failed to finish several more novels in the last of which A New World Symphony he returned once again to the device of a female protagonist narrator The novel was finally abandoned around 1954 61 Notes and references EditNotes The initial page of the St Brides story gives the Willow Gables address as near Mallerton Wilts 51 The Willow Gables material in Jill is included between pages 116 and 152 of the 1975 Faber and Faber paperback edition ISBN 0 571 10691 9 References Motion p 72 Booth p vii Motion pp 64 65 Motion pp 53 54 Motion p 58 a b c Motion pp 86 87 a b Booth pp viii ix a b Booth pp xii xiii Thwaite p 58 Motion p 106 Soester Jeffrey 2 May 2008 Obituary Blanche Coleman The Guardian Booth p xii Thwaite pp 66 and 69 Thwaite p 62 Thwaite p 63 Thwaite p 80 a b Motion p 101 a b c Bradford pp 52 55 Booth pp 3 5 Booth p xvi Bradford p 51 Motion p 92 Booth pp 129 30 Motion p 88 a b Motion pp 93 96 Cooper pp 23 25 Cooper p 28 Cooper p 30 Booth pp 241 52 Motion p 98 Motion p 97 Amis p 55 Thwaite p 64 Thwaite p 69 Thwaite p 70 Booth p xvii Booth p 253 Motion pp 101 02 Booth pp 255 73 a b c Canning Richard 16 May 2002 Trouble at Willow Gables and Other Fictions Philip Larkin edited by James Booth The Independent Rowe 2000 pp 82 85 Rowe 2000 p 86 Rowe 2000 p 80 Rowe M W December 2001 On being Brunette Larkin s schoolgirl fiction Critical Quarterly 43 4 42 58 doi 10 1111 1467 8705 00387 subscription required Woolcock Nicola 23 April 2001 Poet Larkin s lesbian tales reveal desire to be female The Daily Telegraph Hartley Emma Thorpe Vanessa 22 April 2001 How the young Philip Larkin courted Trouble at Willow Gables The Observer Diski Jenny 16 May 2002 Gym slips and hockey sticks Philip Larkin s schoolgirl stories The Guardian Potts Robert 13 May 2002 Schoolgirl capers New Statesman Castle Terry 22 March 2007 The lesbianism of Philip Larkin Daedalus 136 2 88 102 doi 10 1162 daed 2007 136 2 88 JSTOR 20028113 S2CID 57570694 subscription required Bradford p 57 Booth p 131 Motion pp 154 56 Cooper p 6 Cooper p 10 Cooper p 14 Cooper p 23 Booth pp xxx xxxi Motion p 132 Motion pp 158 59 Motion p 164 Booth pp xxxvi and xli xliiSources EditAmis Kingsley 1991 Memoirs London Hutchinsons ISBN 0 09 174533 0 Booth James ed 2002 Philip Larkin Trouble at Willow Gables and Other Fictions London Faber and Faber ISBN 0 571 20347 7 Bradford Richard 2005 First Boredom Then Fear The Life of Philip Larkin London and Chester Springs Peter Owen ISBN 0 7206 1147 4 Cooper Stephen 2004 Philip Larkin Subversive writer Brighton Sussex Academic Press ISBN 1 84519 000 9 Motion Andrew 1993 Philip Larkin A Writer s Life London Faber and Faber ISBN 0 571 15174 4 Rowe M W 2000 Unreal Girls Lesbian Fantasy in Early LarkininNew Larkins for Olded James Booth Basingstoke and New York Palgrave ISBN 0 333 76107 3 Thwaite Anthony 1992 Selected Letters of Philip Larkin London Faber and Faber ISBN 0 571 15197 3 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Brunette Coleman amp oldid 1166352005 Novel Michaelmas Term at St Bride s, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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