This paper will attempt to shed some light on attitudes to sexual intercourse and sexual activity in the Book of Odes (shijing) and the Song of Songs (sir hassirim). “Sex” is perhaps not a topic one immediately associates with the Confucian classics or the Hebrew Bible, and indeed many Confucian, Jewish and Christian thinkers have argued over the centuries that sex is, at best, a necessary but dangerous activity, which needs to be carefully controlled. This negative view of sex, it will be argued in this paper, is at odds with the textual evidence in the Book of Odes and the Song of Songs, in which sex is frankly celebrated. Taking as its subject matter four poems from the Book of Odes and three excerpts from the Song of Songs, this study will construct an argument that the Odes and the Song, although, different in many important respects, both celebrate the fundamental goodness of sex. On the other hand, the study will also argue that neither the Song nor the Odes should be read as paeans to unrestrained lust; rather, these texts celebrate sexuality expressed in the context of wise and virtuous living. The study is of necessity brief, and does not pretend to be a full treatment of the complex topic, but it is hoped that the study will serve as a stepping stone for a fuller and more nuanced treatment in the future.