Was Henry Lawson bisexual?
Posted: Mon Oct 30, 2017 2:56 pm
Frank Moorhouse has just published a new book on Lawson called The Drover’s Wife (Knopf) and in it, according to an article he wrote for the SMH over the weekend (see link below), he examines the possibility that Lawson was bisexual. Moorhouse says that the “biggest surprise” when researching his book was to learn of Lawson’s “effeminacy”, something apparently acknowledged by the poet himself and others at the time. An aunt reportedly said he “should’ve been born a girl”.
Moorhouse writes: “On the evidence, Lawson struggled with the conventional masculine role and, I believe, the unresolvable inner tensions of his sexuality. I speculate that his effeminate personality contributed to his abuse of alcohol, which can be both a relief from and, a form of, emotional absence within a relationship.”
It’s all conjecture, of course, but it does cast an interesting light on the poet’s generally unhappy life, and, among other things, Moorhouse draws on some poems and one particular relationship to support his argument. Given some of the extreme attitudes thrown up by the current debate over marriage equality, it’s hard to imagine the challenges faced by someone unsure of their sexuality a century ago.
David
http://www.smh.com.au/entertainment/boo ... z6lam.html
Moorhouse writes: “On the evidence, Lawson struggled with the conventional masculine role and, I believe, the unresolvable inner tensions of his sexuality. I speculate that his effeminate personality contributed to his abuse of alcohol, which can be both a relief from and, a form of, emotional absence within a relationship.”
It’s all conjecture, of course, but it does cast an interesting light on the poet’s generally unhappy life, and, among other things, Moorhouse draws on some poems and one particular relationship to support his argument. Given some of the extreme attitudes thrown up by the current debate over marriage equality, it’s hard to imagine the challenges faced by someone unsure of their sexuality a century ago.
David
http://www.smh.com.au/entertainment/boo ... z6lam.html