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ophthacare himalaya It is, however, an idea that Laurie carries with him into adult life, as did many gay men of his and earlier generations. The Victorian homosexual apologist John Addington Symonds gratefully fell on the Platonic dialogue about love as a schoolboy, as did Clive Durham in EM Forster’s Maurice (written 1913-14). In Plato, Clive found homosexuality “described exquisitely, calmly, as a passion which we can direct, like any other, towards good or bad”. The advice it offered: “To make the most of what I have”, is very similar to Ralph’s creed that “It’s not what one is. It’s what one does with it” – though of course Renault could not have read Maurice when she wrote her novel, since it wasn’t published until 1971.