Mystic, poet, artist and popular writer

James Bond was modelled by Ian Fleming, it is said, on the famous British spy, Sidney Reilly. He too was a debonair womaniser, who loved them and left them. One of Sidney’s ‘women’, who was desperately in love with him, but was abandoned for another woman, was Caryll Houselander. She never fully got over the rejection and never formed another lasting relationship. Caryll was not a Catholic until the age of 6; then she abandoned Catholicism at 18, and returned again when she was 24. She said, of herself, in her autobiography, that she was not a cradle Catholic but one that swung to and fro, like a rocking horse (hence the name of her book.). Maise Ward, the famous writer and publisher of the 1950s, described Caryll as ‘that Divine Eccentric'; and indeed she was.
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Fifty years ago this June, 16 priests were ordained for the Archdiocese of Southwark. Trained for a  pre-Vatican II Church they were the first priests to live out their ministry guided by the teaching of the Second Vatican Council.