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Episode 6

A novel based on the early life of the poet Charles Causley, the mother who raised him single-handed, and the clandestine love he hid from the world. Read by Tristan Sturrock

Charles's father died when he was seven, leaving his mother Laura to bring the boy up on her own. Charles was different from his classmates at his Cornish primary school: short-sighted, shy, old for his years and fascinated by language, he found it difficult to fit in, and his closest bond was with his mother. In adolescence, he began to look elsewhere for the love he craved, only gradually realising that it was not the kind of love society looked kindly on.

When war broke out, Charles joined the Navy with the newly-establlished rank of coder. His escape from the narrow confines of Launceston to the colour and violence of war saw him face not only the possibility of a brutal death, but the constant danger of a love that was as clandestine as his work. Always intensely private, Causley kept his most intense feelings to himself all his life, but Patrick Gale has found in his poetry and journals the clues that have allowed him to recreate imaginatively the making of one of our best-loved poets.

6/10: The Navy. Charles travels to Skegness to begin his training as a Coder

Writer: This is Patrick Gale's seventeenth novel. He lives in the far west of Cornwall on a farm near Land's End with his husband. As a patron of the Charles Causley Trust he was already passionate about Causley’s poetry, but it was only when he started to look more closely into the poet’s life that he hit on the idea of basing a novel on him.

Reader: Tristan Sturrock was born and raised in Cornwall, and was lucky enough to know Charles Causley before the poet's death. He has worked for thirty years with the theatre company Kneehigh, has played leading roles in the National Theatre and the West End, and is known for his TV roles in Doc Martin and Poldark

Abridger/Producer: Sara Davies

14 minutes

Last on

Mon 4 Jul 2022 22:45

Broadcast

  • Mon 4 Jul 2022 22:45