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Worm in the Bud

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Good*

*Best Available: (missing dust jacket)

$6.39
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Book Overview

In this fascinating study Ronald Pearsall exposes with surprisingly thorough documentation, the plain facts of sex-life (approved and illicit) among the aritocracy, the middle class and poor in the... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

3 ratings

Ignore the first two chapters

I loved this book. Adored it. So much so that when the second hand copy I owned began falling apart I dashed all over to try and find a way to keep it together. But it's one fault is the opening two chapters that talk about the aristocracy and people of interest that while informative, paint the book as much duller and dryer than the rest. The drawled through these chapters, and then flew through the rest of the book which I could barely put down. Mr Pearsall's character and tone infuse the book, and it feels less like reading but having a good, long conversation with a knowledgeable friend. The subject itself is fascinating; the Victorian era, which tried so hard to look upright and respectable, is turned on it's head and shown for the vibrant and sexually rife world it was with examples and explanations not only of how people acted, but how they reacted, how they were supposed to act and how they hid behind closed doors. A look into Victorian life that's a must read for anyone interested in the time, I recommend this book to anyone who'll listen.

More information than you may need, but wise and witty

This 1969 study roams "the world of Victorian sexuality," and over 650-plus closely typed pages you'd think it would have exhausted the subject. It opens splendidly, and for much of its length you're carried along with aplomb by the verve of the prose, the wit of the insights, and the mass of the material. Pearsall with great energy delves into what even in the late Sixties was often a difficult subject to access in English archives, often uncatalogued, or jealousy guarded by its keepers in what the British Library called "The Private Cases," one of the largest erotica collections anywhere. Formidable difficulties met Pearsall's attempts to uncover data beyond the pornographic magazines or love poetry or yellow journalism of the period, and he found as of forty years ago much still left in error or confusion. However, it's a pleasure to read a book that preceded Foucault, one that does not become mired in "social constructionism," or in thrall to academic trendiness. It's written for the intelligent common reader, and deserves attention. Pearsall reminds us first off how we're not that much altered from our ancestors a century or so ago; "the difference lies in the accommodation to the age in which they live, in their susceptibility to outside forces." (19) Divorce being limited, it does not mean Victorians were more faithful. Oscar Wilde's notoriety does not mean that homosexuality was less common than now; "because Queen Victoria is supposed to have not known what Lesbianism was, it does not mean that her subjects were no wiser." (19) Not aliens, but ourselves "planted in an age when it was difficult to be honest with oneself, where guilt and alarm filtered out of the personal into the public sphere, when private sexual proclivities were thought to be unique to oneself, and uniquely damning. Harrassed beyond measure, the procreative instinct manifested itself in ways that to the thoughtless are funny, to the perceptive, pathetic." He begins with the aristocracy and works his way down the classes. The middle classes so long derided, Pearsall argues, could hardly have done differently as they "acted on a level that was hardly more than instinctive; when sex semaphored its presence, reason retired in confusion." (18-19) The extravagant metaphors in the press "coverage" of Prince Albert's nuptials with the Queen make one half-blush and half-gape, so raunchy yet witty they remain. While Pearsall, later in this work, disdains the doggedly punnish, relentlessly puerile, and/or clumsily verbose descriptions of the pornography peddled in such short-lived journals as "The Pearl," his critique jarred me, I admit. He appears throughout the work to thumb his nose at such playful smut, but I was at a loss to figure out what would have been a better alternative for the era, given the restrictions he constantly confirms. The problem with the topic stymies any investigator. It's sex, it's over a century ago, and it's recorded-- or not-- at a time notoriousl

What the Butler Saw

Utterly fascinating account of the Victorian moral universe, including much about the personal proclivities and dysfunctions of the great men and women of the time. It should be mandatory reading for anyone attempting to tackle Victorian literature or history in any serious way, on the very un-Victorian principle that to understand a person (or a nation, or a whole historical era), one should know something of their nocturnal shadow-side. As an example, the reader should look to the life of the eminent prime minister Gladstone, who performed his moral duty by taking "fallen women" into his care, oblivious of the sexually dubious nature of his activities, at least publicly. His diaries are full of cryptic symbols which the author contends were a code for certain self-directed activities involving a horse-whip. The Victorian period's reputation for moral hypocrisy is addressed deeply here, in the full glare of the horrors underpinning the class system and the era of colonial expansion and triumphalism. This the best thing Pearsall wrote, generous and fertile, and after reading it the first time, it took me five years to find another copy. It's a scandal that this book is out of print.
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