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The Culture Show 2013 D H Lawrence A Journey Without Shame
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Thank you my friend SGT (Join to see) for making us aware that on March 2, 1930 English poet and writer David Herbert [D.H.] Lawrence died of tuberculosis at the age of 44.
The Culture Show 2013 D H Lawrence A Journey Without Shame
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S5zYyGEK--4
Images:
1. David Herbert Lawrence and his wife Frieda in a train carriage
2. Statue of David Herbert Lawrence at the University of Nottingham, England
3. David Herbert Lawrence (1885–1930) by Ernesto Guardia, 1920s
4. David Herbert Lawrence's girlfriend Jessie Chambers when they were teenagers
Background from {[https://www.oxforddnb.com/view/10.1093/ref:odnb/ [login to see] [login to see] /odnb [login to see] 128-e-34435]}
Lawrence, David Herbert (1885–1930), writer, was born on 11 September 1885 at what is now 8A Victoria Street, Eastwood, near Nottingham, the fourth of the five children of Arthur John Lawrence (1846–1924) and his wife, Lydia Beardsall (1851–1910). Arthur Lawrence, like his three brothers, was a coalminer who worked from the age of ten until he was sixty-six, was very much at home in the small mining town, and was widely regarded as an excellent workman and cheerful companion. Lawrence's mother Lydia was the second daughter of Robert Beardsall and his wife, Lydia Newton of Sneinton; originally lower middle-class, the Beardsalls had suffered financial disaster in the 1860s and Lydia, in spite of attempts to work as a pupil teacher, had, like her sisters, been forced into employment as a sweated home worker in the lace industry. But she had had more education than her husband, and passed on to her children an enduring love of books, a religious faith, and a commitment to self-improvement, as well as a profound desire to move out of the working class in which she felt herself trapped. The resulting differences between her and her husband left their children permanently divided in loyalty, and played a considerable role in Lawrence's subsequent writing.
Early years
Growing up in Eastwood, which depended almost completely on the mining industry (ten pits lay within walking distance), was difficult for a boy like Bert Lawrence, often in poor health and obviously frail. He was bullied at school, failed to join in games with the other boys, and—still worse—clearly preferred the company of girls, who talked rather than fought. School reinforced in him a sense of isolation and difference: 'When I go down pit you'll see what — sums I'll do' (Worthen, Early Years, 85) was the constant refrain of his contemporaries, and Lawrence knew from very early on that, in spite of his father's expectations, he would not be a miner. It took him some time to do well at school: he felt the pressure of being unlike the other boys, and he was following his elder brother William Ernest, who had excelled in everything he did, whether schoolwork or playing games. By the age of twelve, however, Lawrence was a success; he became the first boy from Eastwood to win one of the recently established county council scholarships, and went to Nottingham high school.
At the high school, however, Lawrence did not distinguish himself. The scholarship boys were a class apart; Lawrence made few friends, and after an excellent start his performance fell away (not helped by the notoriety necessarily brought on his family by the arrest of his father's brother Walter in 1900 for killing his fifteen-year-old son). Lawrence left school in summer 1901 with little to show for the experience, and started work as a factory clerk for the Nottingham surgical appliances manufacturer Haywoods. That autumn, however, a catastrophe overtook the Lawrence family: William Ernest, by now a successful clerk in London, fell ill and died. Lydia Lawrence was distraught (she needed her children to make up for the disappointments of her life), and when Lawrence himself went down with pneumonia that winter, her affections turned significantly towards him. When he recovered he started work as a pupil teacher at the British School in Eastwood, where he spent the next three years.
Another important development during this period was Lawrence's acquaintance with the Chambers family, who had recently moved from Eastwood into the country. He and his mother visited the Haggs Farm in summer 1900, and Lawrence began regular visits there after his illness, becoming a particular friend of the eldest son, Alan. The second daughter, Jessie, however, made herself his intellectual companion; they read books together and endlessly discussed authors and writing. It was under Jessie's influence that in 1905 Lawrence started to write poetry: 'A collier's son a poet!' he remarked sardonically (Worthen, Early Years, 130), but his mother had written poetry in her time too. In 1906 he started his first novel, which eventually became The White Peacock. Jessie Chambers saw all his early writing, and her encouragement and admiration were crucial.
In 1904 Lawrence achieved the first division of the first class in the king's scholarship examination, and his mother was determined that he should study for his teacher's certificate at the University College of Nottingham. After a year's full-time teaching in Eastwood, he went to Nottingham in 1906 to follow the normal course. He completed its demands without difficulty, acquiring a considerable contempt for academic life while doing so; he also completed a second draft of his novel, as well as entering three stories in the Nottinghamshire Guardian Christmas story competition in 1907: 'A Prelude' won, under the name of Jessie Chambers.
Schoolteacher
Lawrence qualified as a teacher in 1908 and took a post in Davidson Road elementary school in Croydon. He found the demands of teaching in a large school in a poor area very different from those at Eastwood under a protective headmaster. Nevertheless he established himself as an energetic teacher, ready to use new teaching methods (Shakespeare lessons became practical drama classes, for example). The contacts he made through school were probably more important than his job: Agnes Mason, rather older than Lawrence, tended to mother him, but a younger friend of hers, Helen Corke, at another school, caught his interest; Arthur McLeod, on the Davidson staff, read Lawrence's work and lent him books. He was now reading significantly modern authors such as William James, Baudelaire, and Nietzsche (whom he discovered while in London), and during these years he lost his religious faith. Above all Lawrence was trying to develop his writing career by working in the evenings and holidays; he was engaged on yet another draft of his novel and writing a great deal of poetry. In the summer of 1909 came the breakthrough. Jessie Chambers had sent some of his poems to Ford Madox Hueffer (later Ford), at the English Review, and Hueffer not only printed them, but saw Lawrence and, after reading the manuscript of The White Peacock, wrote to the publisher William Heinemann recommending it. By now the novel was an extraordinary mixture of the literary, the pastoral, the romantic, and the tragic; Lawrence referred to it as 'a kind of exquisite scented soap' (Letters, 1.158). Hueffer also got Lawrence to write about his mining background, which resulted in a short story, 'Odour of Chrysanthemums', and his first play, A Collier's Friday Night (in 1910 he wrote a second play, The Widowing of Mrs. Holroyd). Hueffer's successor at the English Review, Austin Harrison, continued to publish Lawrence's stories and poems.
Lawrence was finding Croydon fruitful for other reasons, too. He was attracted to yet another Croydon teacher, Agnes Holt; and discovered that Helen Corke had recently had an affair with a married man who killed himself. She told Lawrence the whole story, and he re-created it in the first draft of another novel, The Trespasser, falling in love with her as he did so. In winter 1909–10, however, he started a new relationship with Jessie Chambers and they had a rather unhappy affair through spring and summer 1910. In August he broke off their relationship, just before his mother was taken fatally ill. He spent as much time at her side in Eastwood as he could that autumn, and in October started the first draft of his autobiographical novel Paul Morel, with its vivid picture of Mrs Morel. Lydia Lawrence died in December 1910 shortly after Lawrence had got engaged to his old college friend Louie Burrows.
The year 1911 was, in spite of Heinemann's publication of The White Peacock in January, a desperate year for Lawrence. He was mourning his mother, unhappy in his engagement, missing Jessie Chambers's support, and desperate to get out of a job which took him away from writing (he could make only limited progress with Paul Morel, for example). He was fortunate in making contact with Edward Garnett, reader for the publishers Duckworth, who helped him place his work; but in November he fell seriously ill with double pneumonia and nearly died. His career as a teacher was now over. After convalescence in Bournemouth, where characteristically he rewrote The Trespasser in a month (Garnett had got it accepted by Duckworth, and had given him good advice for its revision), Lawrence broke off his engagement to Louie Burrows, returned to the midlands, and worked to complete the book on which he felt his future as a writer really depended, Paul Morel.
A new life
Having decided to visit his cousins in north Germany, Lawrence called on his Nottingham professor Ernest Weekley for advice. At Weekley's house, on 3 March 1912 Lawrence met and fell in love with Weekley's wife Frieda Emma Maria Johanna, née von Richthofen (1879–1956), six years older than himself. The whole direction of his life changed; he broke off for the last time with Jessie Chambers and set himself to earn his living as a professional writer. When Frieda visited her family in Germany in May, Lawrence travelled with her, and worked to persuade her to leave her husband, which meant leaving her three young children too. The situation was unresolved for months. Frieda's desire to be free of her marriage was not consistent with Lawrence's insistence that she become his partner, and she suffered agonies from the loss of her children (Weekley was determined to keep them away from her). Some of the vicissitudes of this time are recreated in Lawrence's poetry collection Look! We have Come Through! (1917). In Germany, Lawrence finished Paul Morel, and worked hard at essays and short stories. He and Frieda ended up living in a flat in Icking, near Munich, rented by Alfred Weber, lover of Frieda's sister Else Jaffe. Heinemann turned down Paul Morel on grounds of indecency, but Duckworth took it over and Garnett persuaded Lawrence to give it a final revision, doubtless feeling (as with The Trespasser) that the book needed to be made ‘more actual’ and more focused on its theme. Lawrence and Frieda travelled down to Italy, walking wherever they could (over the Pfitscher Joch, for example), and in September settled in Villa, near Gargnano, beside Lake Garda. Lawrence completed the revisions of Paul Morel and turned it into Sons and Lovers (it was published the following May). What supported them financially was The Trespasser; and to add to his happiness, during their months in Italy, Frieda finally resolved to stay with him. He was a man exhilarated by the new experience of Italy, by creative achievement, and by a very strenuous kind of love. Frieda was 'the one possible woman for me, for I must have opposition—something to fight'; marrying Jessie Chambers 'would have been a fatal step, I should have had too easy a life, nearly everything my own way' (Nehls, 1.71). He cooked, cleaned, wrote, argued; Frieda attended little to house keeping (though washing became her speciality), but she could always hold her own against his theorizing, and maintained her independence of outlook as well as of sexual inclination (she slept with a number of other men during her time with Lawrence).
During winter 1912–13 Lawrence wrote two plays (including his best, The Daughter-in-Law) and more poetry (his first volume, Love Poems and Others, was published in February 1913), and started a number of new novel projects. He wrote 200 pages of a book he called 'The Insurrection of Miss Houghton'; but it was 'The Sisters', originally 'for the “jeunes filles”' (Letters, 1.546), which determined his course as a novelist for the next three years. Back in Germany by early summer 1913 he wrote some of his finest short stories, including the story published as 'The Prussian Officer'. He returned to England and with Garnett's help took care of the publication of short stories new and old; his meeting with Edward Marsh and immediate fellow feeling with Katherine Mansfield and John Middleton Murry established friendships which were long and significant. The reviews of Sons and Lovers were also very encouraging: 'an achievement of the first quality', wrote the poet Lascelles Abercrombie, for example (introduction, Sons and Lovers, lxv), and although its sales remained fairly low the book and its author had gathered a significant reputation.
The period from August 1913 to June 1914 saw Lawrence revising The Widowing of Mrs. Holroyd (published 1914) and working through many drafts of 'The Sisters'; the book had turned into a huge saga of midlands life and marriage, 'written in another language almost' from Sons and Lovers; 'I have no longer the joy in creating vivid scenes, that I had in Sons and Lovers' (Letters, 2.132, 142). It had now come to deal with the Brangwen ancestors as well as the two sisters' experiences with men, in a style which Lawrence referred to as 'exhaustive'. In an attempt to write the inner lives of his characters, he was starting to experiment with language and metaphor in a way that disconcerted his contemporaries; his writing did not concentrate on people's psychological make-up so much as on their embodied emotions and needs. The Wedding Ring, the novel Lawrence ended up with in the spring of 1914, however, sounded an attractive prospect to publishers who had been impressed by Sons and Lovers; Lawrence acquired an agent, J. B. Pinker, and a three-volume novel contract with Methuen. Back in England and living in London, he and Frieda married on 13 July 1914. Lawrence also compiled his short-story collection The Prussian Officer and other Stories, and met Catherine Carswell, Richard Aldington, and S. S. Koteliansky, all of whom remained his friends for life.
The Lawrences had intended to return to Italy, but the outbreak of war saw The Wedding Ring returned by Methuen and travel abroad impossible. For the rest of the year they lived in Buckinghamshire, near Murry and Katherine Mansfield, and here Lawrence first fantasized a community (Rananim) which he would occupy with friends like the Murrys and Koteliansky; a fantasy which would constantly recur, shift focus, and be remade over the next ten years. In Buckinghamshire, too, he wrote his Study of Thomas Hardy before starting yet another revision of his novel, this time turning its first half into The Rainbow and leaving the rest of the material (Ursula's and Gudrun's marriages) on one side. Lawrence was now starting to move in circles centred on Garsington Manor and Lady Ottoline Morrell; he met (and thoroughly impressed) Bertrand Russell and E. M. Forster, and later befriended Philip Heseltine (Peter Warlock), the young Aldous Huxley, and the painters Mark Gertler and Dorothy Brett. In March 1915 he finished The Rainbow, and remarked 'Now off and away to find the pots of gold at its feet' (Letters, 2.299). He planned a lecture course with Bertrand Russell, and in the autumn started a magazine, The Signature, with Murry and Katherine Mansfield.
But all these developments came to nothing. The Signature folded; he quarrelled with Russell; Methuen published The Rainbow in September 1915, but it got savage reviews, most of which attacked what was understood as the book's overt sexuality, and it was withdrawn from sale. At Bow Street magistrates' court on 13 November it was banned as obscene (Lawrence having no opportunity to defend it). Its religious language, emotional and sexual explorations of experience, and sheer length had given its readers problems, but it was Ursula's lesbian encounter with a schoolteacher in the chapter 'Shame' which had finally condemned it in the eyes of the law and of a country now focused on conflict: 'A thing like The Rainbow has no right to exist in the wind of war', one review had said (Kinkead-Weekes, 277). Lawrence's career as a writer was catastrophically damaged; he had already thought of going to America to start again there, though at this stage he elected to stay in England. But after the Rainbow disaster he left London to live in Cornwall: 'a temporary refuge until they could get out of England altogether' (ibid., 296). The idea of leaving his country marked the first stage of his major disillusionment with what England offered him, and with what he could do for it as a writer. He felt profoundly rejected; he responded with anger and a retreat into a world as much his own as he could make it.
War
Lawrence had declared in January 1915 that 'The War finished me: it was the spear through the side of all sorrows and hopes' (Letters, 2.268), and not just of his hopes of returning to Italy, or of living happily with Frieda, or working as a writer, though all these things were affected by changes in the world between 1914 and 1918. Rather, the war also seems to have killed his belief in the potential goodness and progress of his own civilization. Lawrence had formulated such a response to the war long before there was much fighting (he was never a pacifist like Bertrand Russell); it was a reaction to the very idea of the war rather than to anything which happened in it. His disillusion with what he saw as the mob spirit and the authoritarian rule of his own country affected the rest of his life and writing career, but the war's main effect at this stage was to sharpen his own sense of isolation.
Lawrence was ill when first in Cornwall, and the problem of earning enough to keep Frieda and himself preoccupied him. He remained resourceful, and Pinker did what he could to help; Lawrence published his first travel book, Twilight in Italy, in June 1916, and between 1916 and 1919 brought out four books of poetry, including Amores and his verse narrative of love and marriage, Look! We have Come Through! In spite of what he feared would be the fate of his fiction after The Rainbow, in spring 1916 he started again on the 'Sisters' material; after an enormous creative effort in which he wrote the whole book twice he had finished the first version of Women in Love by November 1916. But it was rejected by every publisher who saw it; the fact that it contained recognizable re-creations of several people (including Russell, Heseltine, and the Morrells) did not help; nor did its vivid portrayal of what one publisher's reader called 'the writer's expressions of antipathy to England and the forms of English civilisation' (introduction, Women in Love, xxxiv). To Lawrence it was a novel in which 'I have knocked the first loop-hole in the prison where we are all shut up' (Letters, 2.663), but it would not be published for another four years.
Lawrence and Frieda stayed on in Cornwall, living as cheaply as they could. Early in 1917 they made another, more serious attempt to be allowed to go to America, but they could not obtain passports. To make matters worse, in October 1917 they were expelled from Cornwall; the military authorities objected to a suspect writer and an enemy alien living near shipping lanes where German submarines were inflicting heavy losses on allied ships. This confirmed Lawrence's sense of alienation from his country; what role could he now play, except that of an outsider? All the Lawrences could now afford to do was to live precariously in friends' flats and country cottages. In the summer of 1917 Lawrence had completed a major revision of Women in Love; it was the novel which represented his last comprehensive attempt to write for his country, as it examined and characterized contemporary anxiety and conflict.
By 1918 Lawrence was back in the midlands, at Middleton by Wirksworth, living in a cottage paid for by his sister Ada, and the English Review published the first versions of what became Studies of Classic American Literature, his pioneering study of the great eighteenth- and nineteenth-century American writers. Lawrence also wrote essays, the play Touch and Go, and poems; his new publisher, Martin Secker, also published New Poems, and he wrote the first version of his short novel The Fox. The death of his old friend and neighbour Frankie Cooper in Eastwood, however, brought back poignantly his hatred of the midlands. He was himself desperately ill again in the influenza outbreak of February 1919, and only just pulled through; he was reduced to writing a school history book for money. Only in the summer of 1919 did he start to regain what he felt was his freedom. In the autumn Frieda returned to Germany to see her surviving family (her father had died in 1915), while Lawrence finally scraped together what money he had, and left England for Italy. It was the real end of his life rooted in England. Italy in 1912 had been a radical new experience; it was now a place to go when his relationship with England was finished.
Farewell to Europe
The first four months of Lawrence's return to Europe saw him going steadily further south. After a brief return visit to Fiascherino, he went on to Florence, making contact with the writer Norman Douglas and the latter's friend the American writer Maurice Magnus; he joined Frieda and then together they tried Picinisco, in the Abruzzi Mountains, where an English friend, Rosalind Baynes, had thought of living. But although it provided a wonderful setting for the last part of The Lost Girl, it proved impossibly cold and remote; they went further south still, to Capri, where the English writing colony, including Compton Mackenzie and Francis Brett Young, made them welcome; and finally, in February 1920, they went down to Sicily, to the Fontana Vecchia on the outskirts of Taormina. Here Lawrence and Frieda lived for almost two years, and he got down to some serious work. He had been writing the essays of Psychoanalysis and the Unconscious, a sustained attack on Freud; he now wrote The Lost Girl (which drew on the 'Insurrection' novel from 1913), and arranged for the publication of Women in Love in America with a new publisher, Thomas Seltzer, and in England with Secker. He also worked at a novel unfinished since 1917, Aaron's Rod, and started a new book, Mr Noon, but did not finish that either. He was clearly full of ideas for novels after the lean years of the war. In its fragmentary state Mr Noon constitutes a sardonic critique of the contemporary novel-reading public's supposed sensitivities and frailties, as well as providing a vivid recreation of his first months of passionate attraction to Frieda back in 1912, seen from the perspective of a writer who no longer believed in love. In the late summer of 1920 he had a very brief affair with Rosalind Baynes, now living near Florence, but such a relationship made no difference to his commitment to marriage; nor would it have had anything, he hoped, to do with love. A number of his poems in Birds, Beasts and Flowers, especially in the section 'Tortoises', drew on the affair, and his continuing sense of apartness. Although about this time he added some new friends, Earl and Achsah Brewster, to those whose company he enjoyed (and who would remain important for the rest of his life), his separateness as man and writer grew steadily more marked.
In January 1921 Lawrence and Frieda visited Sardinia and he wrote the second of his travel books, Sea and Sardinia, an acute and often very funny diary of the journey. He also found himself able that spring to complete Aaron's Rod, the novel he had been struggling with, in which a working-class musician manages to leave his wife, family, and England, and to live by his art. In this and subsequent novels Lawrence's voice often, quite consciously, came from the sidelines; in them he would stage guerrilla attacks as well as full-frontal assaults; his writing would be goading, insistent, revelatory. In Aaron's Rod he went closer than ever before to writing directly about sexual experience (Seltzer and Secker heavily censored the passages describing Aaron's affair with the marchesa). Like Women in Love it received a mixture of enthusiastic and bewildered reviews: Middleton Murry had declared that Women in Love showed Lawrence 'far gone in the maelstrom of his sexual obsession' but called the new book 'the most important thing that has happened to English literature since the war' (introduction, Aaron's Rod, xlii). To most reviewers, however, it was simply another interesting book made rather unpleasant by Lawrence's obsession with sex.
In the autumn of 1921 Lawrence wrote Fantasia of the Unconscious, a more light-hearted successor to Psychoanalysis and the Unconscious. At the end of 1921 his thorough revision of the short novels The Fox, The Captain's Doll, and The Ladybird showed him working in a new form and with extreme intensity. He also revised all his stories of the war years to create the collection England, my England and other Stories: a way of coming to terms with the past, and putting it behind him. After Maurice Magnus's suicide Lawrence wrote an introduction to Magnus's book about the foreign legion. One of Lawrence's finest pieces of writing, it concentrates on a writer who struggled to articulate what he experienced, and who lived by his wits on the outskirts of conventional society (Magnus was clearly someone in whom Lawrence saw reflections of himself and his own career).
Lawrence found Sicily wonderful, perhaps because it represented a final toe-hold on Europe: the Fontana Vecchia, the garden, the sun, the prospect out over the Mediterranean made it the place where he had been happier to live than anywhere since Cornwall. But by the end of 1921 he was determined to move on and go to America, his ambition for eight years now. In the event, the contact he had with the American hostess Mabel Dodge Sterne and her friends in the artists' colony of Taos in New Mexico made him decide to go first to Ceylon, to visit the Brewsters, before approaching America from the west coast. In February 1922 he and Frieda set out for Ceylon.
Round the world and back again
Ceylon was too hot for Lawrence and in most ways a disappointment; he wrote little, which was unusual for him, except letters and his translation of Giovanni Verga; but a previously unconsidered diversion to Australia, provoked by contacts made on the voyage to Colombo, led to an unexpected and (in terms of writing) immensely worthwhile visit. After a brief stay in Western Australia, where they met the writer Mollie Skinner, the Lawrences settled on the coast south of Sydney, at Thirroul; and here, in six weeks, Lawrence wrote his novel Kangaroo, drawing upon his experience of Europe in the new context of Australia; the long chapter 'The Nightmare' was a retrospective on what had happened to him during the war, and how his character Richard Somers—in many ways an alter ego—now felt 'Without a people, without a land. So be it. He was broken apart, apart he would remain' (Kangaroo, 1994, 259). In this novel he questioned the very nature of the novel form, with one chapter reprinting pieces of newspaper in collage fashion, another laconically starting 'Chapter follows chapter, and nothing doing' (ibid., 284).
In Australia the Lawrences saw almost nobody; in America they were plunged into activity after activity. After meeting the poet Witter Bynner and his companion Willard (Spud) Johnson in Santa Fe, in New Mexico, Mabel Sterne and her Indian lover Tony took them around by car from Taos; they visited an Apache reservation and Taos pueblo and saw Indian dances, and Mabel did her best to persuade Lawrence to write both about her and about the American south-west (part of her mission in bringing him there had been to have him re-create the place in his writing). Lawrence and Frieda both reacted strongly against her, however, and spent the winter of 1922–3 at the Del Monte ranch on Lobo Mountain, out of the orbit of Mabel so far as they could manage it; two Danish painter friends (Knud Merrild and Kai Götzsche) lived with them. While up at the ranch Lawrence managed a final reworking of the much revised Studies, shortening and Americanizing the studies in accordance with his new experience. He also finished his poetry collection Birds, Beasts and Flowers, which represents the best and most innovative of his poetry writing.
In the spring of 1923 the Lawrences went down to Mexico with Bynner and Johnson; they visited historical sites, ending up living beside Lake Chapala; and here Lawrence began 'Quetzalcoatl', the novel of the American continent which he had not managed to write in Taos. This first draft of what became The Plumed Serpent occupied him until he and Frieda decided they should go to New York to see Seltzer (currently publishing book after book by Lawrence), and in order to go back to Europe. Frieda was especially anxious to see her children, as two of them were now aged twenty-one or over, and she could see them freely for the first time since 1912. Lawrence, however, could not face Europe and stayed behind in America, after one of their most serious quarrels. After a few months wandering down the west coast in the company of Götzsche (and turning a novel by Mollie Skinner into one for which he was equally responsible, The Boy in the Bush), he resolved to return briefly to Europe. He was in England only for a couple of months; but in a traumatic and significant move, having invited his London friends to dinner at the Café Royal, he invited them to come back to New Mexico with him and Frieda. He felt committed, as has been pointed out, to 'establishing a new life on earth' (Ellis, 151); the final version of his idea for communal living, however, came to nothing. Dorothy Brett was the only one to accept (Middleton Murry said yes, but had decided not to come). After Lawrence and Frieda had been to Germany to see Frieda's mother (of whom Lawrence was increasingly fond), Brett accompanied the Lawrences back to America in March 1924.
This time they resolved to live the life of the ranch from the start, and on a small and partly derelict property given to Frieda by Mabel (Lawrence insisted on paying for it with the manuscript of Sons and Lovers) they spent a busy time getting the cabins ready; and then, with the hard physical work done, Lawrence devoted himself to writing. In an amazingly short time he produced three of his greatest works of the American continent: St. Mawr, 'The Woman who Rode Away', and 'The Princess'. His work was, however, succeeded in August by his first bronchial haemorrhage, perhaps aggravated by the altitude of over 7000 feet. When he felt better, all three of them went down to Mexico in October, where Lawrence wanted to finish The Plumed Serpent. They settled in Oaxaca, Lawrence deliberately choosing a far less Europeanized town than Chapala.
Lawrence wrote the whole novel again, composing his Mornings in Mexico essays in the interim, as a kind of light relief. In many ways this was his most ambitious novel since Women in Love; it attempted to create the sense of a whole society, and of how religion could bring change to society—but it was achieved at a dreadful cost of health and spirits, and perhaps in disregard of his own disillusion with both society and Mexico. No sooner had he completed the novel than he went down with a combination of typhoid and pneumonia, and nearly died. After they had struggled back to Mexico City, Lawrence relapsed, and a doctor diagnosed tuberculosis. Lawrence and Frieda had planned to return to England, but the doctor advised altitude, and they made their way back up to the ranch.
Amazingly, over the summer of 1925 Lawrence recovered much of his health, though he was never so well again as during the strenuous spring and summer of 1924; he compiled the essays in Reflections on the Death of a Porcupine, and also wrote his last play, David. On the ranch, well away from civilization, the Lawrences and Brett lived close to the wildness of nature, although such a life was necessarily always a struggle, and physically demanding. Lawrence wrote in an essay of 1928 how 'New Mexico was the greatest experience from the outside world that I have ever had' (Phoenix, 142), but it was also too much for him. His and Frieda's visas limited how long they could stay in the USA, and in September they travelled back to Europe, Lawrence always hoping he would one day be able to return.
Struggle
It was not long before Lawrence and Frieda were back in Italy, this time in Spotorno, where Lawrence wrote the first version of his short novel Sun, drawing on memories of the Fontana Vecchia. Their landlord at Spotorno was Angelo Ravagli, to whom Frieda was soon attracted, and with whom she lived after Lawrence's death. (Ravagli and Frieda were married in 1950.) To Spotorno came Frieda's daughters too (she could now see her youngest, Barby, as well as Elsa); and Lawrence put their experiences to good use in his short novel The Virgin and the Gipsy which, however, he resolved not to publish (it was too satirical of Ernest Weekley in its portrayal of the Revd Arthur Saywell). A visit from his own sister Ada in the spring of 1926 precipitated another dreadful quarrel with Frieda; he left for a month, to visit the Brewsters and to see Brett, who was back from America for a European holiday. He probably had some kind of brief sexual relationship with Brett at this point before returning to Frieda. They settled down again in a new place, the Villa Mirenda near Florence, in a new mood of reconciliation.
Lawrence's tuberculosis was now a real problem, but he was convinced that he should neither go to a sanatorium nor submit to surgery. He gave good advice to Gertie Cooper, who lived with his sister Ada and her husband, and who was also tubercular, but privately resolved that he himself would stay independent for as long as he could. He had always been good at taking care of himself in sickness and health, and nowhere is this clearer than in his determination during the last years of his life. The word 'tuberculosis' was, indeed, not permitted; he suffered, he insisted, from dreadful bronchials, remarking irritably that 'I have had bronchitis since I was a fortnight old' (Worthen, Early Years, 6). A visit to England during the coal strike of 1926 brought his last opportunity to see his old haunts, and it was probably this experience which prompted the first version of Lady Chatterley's Lover, one of several works revisiting the themes and places of his youth, and the problems of his own early life. His sympathy was now far more with his father (who had died in 1924) than with his mother, and the novel's central character was thoroughly working-class. The second version, started in November 1926, made the novel sexually explicit; it became a hymn to the love-making of the couple, to the body of the man and the woman, for sexuality as it could potentially be between an independent working-class man and an independent upper-class woman. It was a final fictional reworking of a theme which he had always written about for the chance it gave him to concentrate on sexual attraction (and to some extent had enacted in his own life and relationships), but which he now returned to both polemically and nostalgically.
A revived friendship with Aldous and Maria Huxley turned out to be one of the sustaining elements in these difficult years. Lawrence also started to paint, and found it a compensation for much. Early in 1927 he finished the second version of Lady Chatterley's Lover and visited the Etruscan sites of central Italy with Earl Brewster; the trip gave rise to one of the most attractive books of his last years, Sketches of Etruscan Places, which developed the Lawrentian myth of the fulfilled body in the context of a beautifully imagined and recreated civilization. A rather similar work was The Escaped Cock, the first half of which showed Jesus, after the resurrection, valuing above all else the natural, phenomenal world about which Lawrence had always written so compellingly, and which was becoming increasingly important to him as he endured the progressive deteriorations of illness.
The publication (for subscribers) of the final version of Lady Chatterley's Lover—written in the astonishing time of just five weeks, in one of Lawrence's last great bursts of creative energy—also sustained him, as he overcame the difficulties lying in the way of an individual publishing and distributing his own book. With the help of the Florentine bookseller Pino Orioli, the handsome volume was printed in and distributed from Florence, and made Lawrence more money than he had ever imagined. In June he wrote the second part of The Escaped Cock, in which Jesus experiences sexual desire again, after the resurrection; another work of intense nostalgia for the body. Lawrence had, however, suffered more than one haemorrhage at the Mirenda, and always tended to distrust places where he had been seriously ill; he left Florence in the summer of 1928, just at the time when Lady Chatterley's Lover was making it possible for him to pay doctors' bills and live more comfortably (often in hotels) than his previously careful existence had allowed.
Dying game
Lawrence and Frieda tried living first at altitude in Switzerland, at Gsteig, and then went down to the Mediterranean island of Port Cros, but a small hotel in Bandol, in the south of France, by the sea, as in Fiascherino, Taormina, Thirroul, and Spotorno, suited Lawrence better than anywhere. He was now no longer writing fiction, but he created many of the poems in Pansies during winter 1928–9; he also wrote short personal articles for newspaper publication, as he targeted yet another audience with his writing. As a friend commented, 'he challenged everything' (Nehls, 2.318). The fact of his writing itself was rooted in opposition; he remarked to another friend that 'If there weren't so many lies in the world … I wouldn't write at all' (ibid., 3.293). In 1925 he had described his role as a writer as not to sit aloft or detached but increasingly to be 'in among the crowd, kicking their shins or cheering them on to some mischief or merriment' (Letters, 5.201); of all his books, Lady Chatterley's Lover most mischievously both attacked and cheered on its readers.
It turned out that Lady Chatterley's Lover was being extensively pirated in Europe and the USA. The theft irritated Lawrence, who had always meant to make the novel available in a cheap edition; in the spring of 1929, accordingly, he went to Paris to organize it. He was further stirred to action by the police seizure in England of the unexpurgated typescript of his volume of poems Pansies; meanwhile the exhibition of his paintings in London in summer 1929 (which he was too ill to attend) was raided by the police, and court hearings were necessary before the paintings could be returned to their owner. These irritations both provoked and stimulated Lawrence, as in his poem 'Innocent England':
Virginal, pure, policemen cameAnd hid their faces for very shame.
But in an increasingly desperate desire to find a place where his health would improve, he and Frieda visited Majorca, France, and Bavaria before they returned to Bandol for the winter. Beside the Mediterranean once again, he wrote Apocalypse, his last book about the European psyche and its needs, which had started as an introduction to a book by Frederick Carter; he also wrote the poems published posthumously as Last Poems (1932). He saw a good deal of the Huxleys and the Brewsters, who rallied round him and Frieda as his health failed.
In a final attempt to stave off his illness Lawrence agreed with an English doctor to spend a month doing nothing (after he had finished his poems and Apocalypse), but felt the action had had no result; consequently, at the start of February 1930, he went into the ominously named Ad Astra sanatorium in Vence. It was too late; he was terrifyingly thin, almost ethereal, virtually incapable of walking, and the doctors could do nothing for him. Determined, as he put it to Gertie Cooper, to 'die game' (Letters, 5.632), he discharged himself from the sanatorium on 1 March 1930, and Frieda helped him move into the Villa Robermond, a rented house in Vence. He was not going to die where he did not choose to live: it was his last independent act. He died on the evening of the following day, Sunday 2 March, and was buried in Vence cemetery on 4 March. In 1935, following cremation, his ashes were reportedly either taken to New Mexico, where they were mixed into concrete and kept in a 'chapel' at the Kiowa ranch, or scattered into the Mediterranean.
After life
When very young Lawrence was almost white-haired (Billy the White-Nob was one of his names at home); before the war, when first becoming known as a writer, he was red-moustached, pale-complexioned, with thick brown hair and bright eyes. He was a person of immense charm and strikingly attractive, not so much for his features as for his uncanny sympathy with and marvellously quick understanding of others. Someone as normally shrewd as Bertrand Russell was overwhelmed by his first encounter with Lawrence; 'he is amazing; he sees through and through one … He is infallible. He is like Ezekiel or some other Old Testament prophet' (Kinkead-Weekes, 190). Lawrence grew his famous red beard only in autumn 1914 and it quickly became the mark of his difference. In 1928 a vicious attack on Lady Chatterley's Lover referred to its author as 'this bearded satyr' (Nehls, 3.262), and the beard remains the characteristic identifying feature of Lawrence's posthumous self.
In spite of the notoriety of Lady Chatterley's Lover, Lawrence became really famous only after his death; and at first only briefly. The editor of the relevant Dictionary of National Biography supplement, J. R. H. Weaver, was squeezed rather reluctantly up to a longer word allowance in 1933 by the secretary to the Oxford University Press, who feared 'howls of execration' unless Lawrence received his due. 'I was full of doubt (and, I suppose, of prejudice—though I try not to be)', Weaver replied; 'I wondered what would be thought about him—even 20 years hence. However, a great deal is said about him now, and no doubt we ought to reflect that'. His reputation lapsed in the late 1930s: he had written too unconventionally and had made too many enemies, and numerous memoirs (mostly by women who had known him) published between 1930 and 1935 combined to make him appear an absurd rather than important figure. Penguin Books began to republish his work after the Second World War, and by the late 1950s he was widely seen as one of the great writers of the twentieth century; F. R. Leavis's D. H. Lawrence: Novelist (1956) had confirmed his new reputation. The prosecution of the Penguin edition of Lady Chatterley's Lover in 1960 led to a trial in which both academics and senior figures of the British establishment spoke on Lawrence's behalf; E. M. Forster, too, stood up for him. Films were made of his work; Jack Cardiff's Sons and Lovers of 1960 and Ken Russell's Women in Love of 1969 typified his new standing, with its use of leading contemporary actors such as Alan Bates and Glenda Jackson, and a script designed to shock and surprise; the filming of the naked wrestling of Birkin (Bates) and Gerald (Oliver Reed) was a landmark in what was publicly acceptable. Films of The Virgin and the Gipsy (1970) and a soft-porn version of Lady Chatterley's Lover (1980) confirmed, however, that it was Lawrence's standing as a supposed sexual specialist (to which he had objected in his own lifetime) which was primarily being exploited. By the mid-1970s Lawrence's reputation was in something of a decline. Feminist writing, such as Kate Millett's Sexual Politics (1970), denounced him for chauvinism, and while neither a modernist revolutionary like Joyce, nor—like Virginia Woolf—reacting as a woman against the social and literary world which confined her, Lawrence occupied a problematic position in the writing history of the century. He came to be unthinkingly branded both sexist and (because of his denunciations of democracy and mob-rule) fascist.
The republication of Lawrence's work in a scholarly edition by Cambridge University Press, and in particular the publication in full of his letters—one of his greatest achievements—suggest that he may be seen differently in future. He turns out to have been a writer far more concerned with the careful revision and linguistic precision of his work than his early reputation as an uneducated, spontaneous, and unthinking genius suggested; he was ahead of his time in many of his attitudes to the individual and society; he had an extraordinary range as a writer in many genres (novels, stories, travel books, poems, plays, and essays); he was also a writer who explored an extremely wide range of subjects, in particular the need for a language of relationship which involves the experience of the body, rather than any idea of love. He was precise about what he saw as the malign influence of Freud, never allied himself with the excesses of Nietzsche, and was strikingly modern in his expression of a need to be ecologically aware. He never believed in right-wing governments and hated the fascism he saw in the early and middle twenties in Italy and Germany, though he always believed in human beings' need for government and authority; his writing certainly concentrated on female sexuality, but that was his particular, and in his period a strikingly original, focus. What the feminism of the 1970s saw as an effort at phallic supremacy in his writing can also be seen as a strikingly ‘female’ account of sexuality, with its constant stress on the feelings rather than on observed sexual activity, and on intimacy and necessary opposition rather than on the superiority of one gender over the other. He was a writer who constantly struggled to find and to articulate the experience, not of a body or mind or spirit, but of the whole person. This was what he wrote about most magically and most tellingly, and what he attempted to remain true to in his own life. The last page of his last book, Apocalypse, written when he was confronting death, ended: 'the magnificent here and now of life in the flesh is ours, and ours alone, and ours only for a time. We ought to dance with rapture that we should be alive and in the flesh' (p. 149).
Sources
• The Cambridge edition of the letters of D. H. Lawrence, ed. J. T. Boulton and others, 8 vols. (1979–2000)
• Introduction, D. H. Lawrence, Sons and lovers, ed. H. Baron and C. Baron (1992)
• Introduction, D. H. Lawrence, Women in love, ed. D. Farmer, L. Vasey, and J. Worthen (1987)
• Introduction, D. H. Lawrence, Aaron's rod, ed. M. Kalnins (1988)
• Introduction, D. H. Lawrence, Kangaroo, ed. B. Steele (1994)
• D. H. Lawrence, Phoenix (1936)
• J. Worthern, The early years, 1885–1912 (1991), vol. 1 of The Cambridge biography: D. H. Lawrence, 1885–1930, ed. D. Ellis, M. Kinkead-Weekes, and J. Worthern (1991–8)
• M. Kinkead-Weekes, Triumph to exile, 1912–1922 (1996), vol. 2 of The Cambridge biography: D. H. Lawrence, 1885–1930, ed. D. Ellis, M. Kinkead-Weekes, and J. Worthern (1991–8)
• D. Ellis, Dying game, 1922–1930 (1998), vol. 3 of The Cambridge biography: D. H. Lawrence, 1885–1930, ed. D. Ellis, M. Kinkead-Weekes, and J. Worthern (1991–8)
• E. Nehls, ed., D. H. Lawrence: a composite biography, 3 vols. (1957–9)
• F. W. Roberts, A bibliography of D. H. Lawrence, rev. 2nd edn (1981)
• private information (2004)
• D. Brett, Lawrence and Brett: a friendship, ed. J. Manchester, rev. 2nd edn (1974)
• E. Brewster and A. Brewster, D. H. Lawrence: reminiscences and correspondence (1934)
• W. Bynner, Journey with genius: recollections and reflections concerning the D. H. Lawrences (1951)
• C. Carswell, The savage pilgrimage (1932)
• E. T. [J. Chambers], D. H. Lawrence: a personal record (1935)
• H. Corke, D. H. Lawrence: the Croydon years (1965)
• M. Green, The von Richthofen sisters: the triumphant and tragic modes of love (1974)
• F. Lawrence, Not I, but the wind (1934)
• F. Lawrence, The memoirs and correspondence, ed. E. W. Tedlock, American edn (1964)
• M. Luhan, Lorenzo in Taos (1933)
• H. T. Moore, The priest of love: a life of D. H. Lawrence (1974)
• J. M. Murry, Reminiscences of D. H. Lawrence (1933)
• R. Parmenter, Lawrence in Oaxaca: a quest for the novelist in Mexico (1984)
• P. Preston, A D. H. Lawrence chronology (1994)
• K. Sagar, D. H. Lawrence: a calendar of his works (1979)
• R. Spencer, D. H. Lawrence country (1980)
• J. Worthen, D. H. Lawrence: a literary life (1989)"
FYI COL Mikel J. Burroughs SMSgt Lawrence McCarter SPC Michael Duricko, Ph.D GySgt Thomas Vick SGT Denny Espinosa SSG Stephen Rogerson SPC Matthew Lamb LTC (Join to see)Maj Bill Smith, Ph.D. MAJ Dale E. Wilson, Ph.D. PO1 William "Chip" Nagel PO2 (Join to see) SSG Franklin Briant SPC Woody Bullard TSgt David L. SMSgt David A Asbury SPC Michael Terrell SFC Chuck Martinez CPT Richard Trione
The Culture Show 2013 D H Lawrence A Journey Without Shame
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S5zYyGEK--4
Images:
1. David Herbert Lawrence and his wife Frieda in a train carriage
2. Statue of David Herbert Lawrence at the University of Nottingham, England
3. David Herbert Lawrence (1885–1930) by Ernesto Guardia, 1920s
4. David Herbert Lawrence's girlfriend Jessie Chambers when they were teenagers
Background from {[https://www.oxforddnb.com/view/10.1093/ref:odnb/ [login to see] [login to see] /odnb [login to see] 128-e-34435]}
Lawrence, David Herbert (1885–1930), writer, was born on 11 September 1885 at what is now 8A Victoria Street, Eastwood, near Nottingham, the fourth of the five children of Arthur John Lawrence (1846–1924) and his wife, Lydia Beardsall (1851–1910). Arthur Lawrence, like his three brothers, was a coalminer who worked from the age of ten until he was sixty-six, was very much at home in the small mining town, and was widely regarded as an excellent workman and cheerful companion. Lawrence's mother Lydia was the second daughter of Robert Beardsall and his wife, Lydia Newton of Sneinton; originally lower middle-class, the Beardsalls had suffered financial disaster in the 1860s and Lydia, in spite of attempts to work as a pupil teacher, had, like her sisters, been forced into employment as a sweated home worker in the lace industry. But she had had more education than her husband, and passed on to her children an enduring love of books, a religious faith, and a commitment to self-improvement, as well as a profound desire to move out of the working class in which she felt herself trapped. The resulting differences between her and her husband left their children permanently divided in loyalty, and played a considerable role in Lawrence's subsequent writing.
Early years
Growing up in Eastwood, which depended almost completely on the mining industry (ten pits lay within walking distance), was difficult for a boy like Bert Lawrence, often in poor health and obviously frail. He was bullied at school, failed to join in games with the other boys, and—still worse—clearly preferred the company of girls, who talked rather than fought. School reinforced in him a sense of isolation and difference: 'When I go down pit you'll see what — sums I'll do' (Worthen, Early Years, 85) was the constant refrain of his contemporaries, and Lawrence knew from very early on that, in spite of his father's expectations, he would not be a miner. It took him some time to do well at school: he felt the pressure of being unlike the other boys, and he was following his elder brother William Ernest, who had excelled in everything he did, whether schoolwork or playing games. By the age of twelve, however, Lawrence was a success; he became the first boy from Eastwood to win one of the recently established county council scholarships, and went to Nottingham high school.
At the high school, however, Lawrence did not distinguish himself. The scholarship boys were a class apart; Lawrence made few friends, and after an excellent start his performance fell away (not helped by the notoriety necessarily brought on his family by the arrest of his father's brother Walter in 1900 for killing his fifteen-year-old son). Lawrence left school in summer 1901 with little to show for the experience, and started work as a factory clerk for the Nottingham surgical appliances manufacturer Haywoods. That autumn, however, a catastrophe overtook the Lawrence family: William Ernest, by now a successful clerk in London, fell ill and died. Lydia Lawrence was distraught (she needed her children to make up for the disappointments of her life), and when Lawrence himself went down with pneumonia that winter, her affections turned significantly towards him. When he recovered he started work as a pupil teacher at the British School in Eastwood, where he spent the next three years.
Another important development during this period was Lawrence's acquaintance with the Chambers family, who had recently moved from Eastwood into the country. He and his mother visited the Haggs Farm in summer 1900, and Lawrence began regular visits there after his illness, becoming a particular friend of the eldest son, Alan. The second daughter, Jessie, however, made herself his intellectual companion; they read books together and endlessly discussed authors and writing. It was under Jessie's influence that in 1905 Lawrence started to write poetry: 'A collier's son a poet!' he remarked sardonically (Worthen, Early Years, 130), but his mother had written poetry in her time too. In 1906 he started his first novel, which eventually became The White Peacock. Jessie Chambers saw all his early writing, and her encouragement and admiration were crucial.
In 1904 Lawrence achieved the first division of the first class in the king's scholarship examination, and his mother was determined that he should study for his teacher's certificate at the University College of Nottingham. After a year's full-time teaching in Eastwood, he went to Nottingham in 1906 to follow the normal course. He completed its demands without difficulty, acquiring a considerable contempt for academic life while doing so; he also completed a second draft of his novel, as well as entering three stories in the Nottinghamshire Guardian Christmas story competition in 1907: 'A Prelude' won, under the name of Jessie Chambers.
Schoolteacher
Lawrence qualified as a teacher in 1908 and took a post in Davidson Road elementary school in Croydon. He found the demands of teaching in a large school in a poor area very different from those at Eastwood under a protective headmaster. Nevertheless he established himself as an energetic teacher, ready to use new teaching methods (Shakespeare lessons became practical drama classes, for example). The contacts he made through school were probably more important than his job: Agnes Mason, rather older than Lawrence, tended to mother him, but a younger friend of hers, Helen Corke, at another school, caught his interest; Arthur McLeod, on the Davidson staff, read Lawrence's work and lent him books. He was now reading significantly modern authors such as William James, Baudelaire, and Nietzsche (whom he discovered while in London), and during these years he lost his religious faith. Above all Lawrence was trying to develop his writing career by working in the evenings and holidays; he was engaged on yet another draft of his novel and writing a great deal of poetry. In the summer of 1909 came the breakthrough. Jessie Chambers had sent some of his poems to Ford Madox Hueffer (later Ford), at the English Review, and Hueffer not only printed them, but saw Lawrence and, after reading the manuscript of The White Peacock, wrote to the publisher William Heinemann recommending it. By now the novel was an extraordinary mixture of the literary, the pastoral, the romantic, and the tragic; Lawrence referred to it as 'a kind of exquisite scented soap' (Letters, 1.158). Hueffer also got Lawrence to write about his mining background, which resulted in a short story, 'Odour of Chrysanthemums', and his first play, A Collier's Friday Night (in 1910 he wrote a second play, The Widowing of Mrs. Holroyd). Hueffer's successor at the English Review, Austin Harrison, continued to publish Lawrence's stories and poems.
Lawrence was finding Croydon fruitful for other reasons, too. He was attracted to yet another Croydon teacher, Agnes Holt; and discovered that Helen Corke had recently had an affair with a married man who killed himself. She told Lawrence the whole story, and he re-created it in the first draft of another novel, The Trespasser, falling in love with her as he did so. In winter 1909–10, however, he started a new relationship with Jessie Chambers and they had a rather unhappy affair through spring and summer 1910. In August he broke off their relationship, just before his mother was taken fatally ill. He spent as much time at her side in Eastwood as he could that autumn, and in October started the first draft of his autobiographical novel Paul Morel, with its vivid picture of Mrs Morel. Lydia Lawrence died in December 1910 shortly after Lawrence had got engaged to his old college friend Louie Burrows.
The year 1911 was, in spite of Heinemann's publication of The White Peacock in January, a desperate year for Lawrence. He was mourning his mother, unhappy in his engagement, missing Jessie Chambers's support, and desperate to get out of a job which took him away from writing (he could make only limited progress with Paul Morel, for example). He was fortunate in making contact with Edward Garnett, reader for the publishers Duckworth, who helped him place his work; but in November he fell seriously ill with double pneumonia and nearly died. His career as a teacher was now over. After convalescence in Bournemouth, where characteristically he rewrote The Trespasser in a month (Garnett had got it accepted by Duckworth, and had given him good advice for its revision), Lawrence broke off his engagement to Louie Burrows, returned to the midlands, and worked to complete the book on which he felt his future as a writer really depended, Paul Morel.
A new life
Having decided to visit his cousins in north Germany, Lawrence called on his Nottingham professor Ernest Weekley for advice. At Weekley's house, on 3 March 1912 Lawrence met and fell in love with Weekley's wife Frieda Emma Maria Johanna, née von Richthofen (1879–1956), six years older than himself. The whole direction of his life changed; he broke off for the last time with Jessie Chambers and set himself to earn his living as a professional writer. When Frieda visited her family in Germany in May, Lawrence travelled with her, and worked to persuade her to leave her husband, which meant leaving her three young children too. The situation was unresolved for months. Frieda's desire to be free of her marriage was not consistent with Lawrence's insistence that she become his partner, and she suffered agonies from the loss of her children (Weekley was determined to keep them away from her). Some of the vicissitudes of this time are recreated in Lawrence's poetry collection Look! We have Come Through! (1917). In Germany, Lawrence finished Paul Morel, and worked hard at essays and short stories. He and Frieda ended up living in a flat in Icking, near Munich, rented by Alfred Weber, lover of Frieda's sister Else Jaffe. Heinemann turned down Paul Morel on grounds of indecency, but Duckworth took it over and Garnett persuaded Lawrence to give it a final revision, doubtless feeling (as with The Trespasser) that the book needed to be made ‘more actual’ and more focused on its theme. Lawrence and Frieda travelled down to Italy, walking wherever they could (over the Pfitscher Joch, for example), and in September settled in Villa, near Gargnano, beside Lake Garda. Lawrence completed the revisions of Paul Morel and turned it into Sons and Lovers (it was published the following May). What supported them financially was The Trespasser; and to add to his happiness, during their months in Italy, Frieda finally resolved to stay with him. He was a man exhilarated by the new experience of Italy, by creative achievement, and by a very strenuous kind of love. Frieda was 'the one possible woman for me, for I must have opposition—something to fight'; marrying Jessie Chambers 'would have been a fatal step, I should have had too easy a life, nearly everything my own way' (Nehls, 1.71). He cooked, cleaned, wrote, argued; Frieda attended little to house keeping (though washing became her speciality), but she could always hold her own against his theorizing, and maintained her independence of outlook as well as of sexual inclination (she slept with a number of other men during her time with Lawrence).
During winter 1912–13 Lawrence wrote two plays (including his best, The Daughter-in-Law) and more poetry (his first volume, Love Poems and Others, was published in February 1913), and started a number of new novel projects. He wrote 200 pages of a book he called 'The Insurrection of Miss Houghton'; but it was 'The Sisters', originally 'for the “jeunes filles”' (Letters, 1.546), which determined his course as a novelist for the next three years. Back in Germany by early summer 1913 he wrote some of his finest short stories, including the story published as 'The Prussian Officer'. He returned to England and with Garnett's help took care of the publication of short stories new and old; his meeting with Edward Marsh and immediate fellow feeling with Katherine Mansfield and John Middleton Murry established friendships which were long and significant. The reviews of Sons and Lovers were also very encouraging: 'an achievement of the first quality', wrote the poet Lascelles Abercrombie, for example (introduction, Sons and Lovers, lxv), and although its sales remained fairly low the book and its author had gathered a significant reputation.
The period from August 1913 to June 1914 saw Lawrence revising The Widowing of Mrs. Holroyd (published 1914) and working through many drafts of 'The Sisters'; the book had turned into a huge saga of midlands life and marriage, 'written in another language almost' from Sons and Lovers; 'I have no longer the joy in creating vivid scenes, that I had in Sons and Lovers' (Letters, 2.132, 142). It had now come to deal with the Brangwen ancestors as well as the two sisters' experiences with men, in a style which Lawrence referred to as 'exhaustive'. In an attempt to write the inner lives of his characters, he was starting to experiment with language and metaphor in a way that disconcerted his contemporaries; his writing did not concentrate on people's psychological make-up so much as on their embodied emotions and needs. The Wedding Ring, the novel Lawrence ended up with in the spring of 1914, however, sounded an attractive prospect to publishers who had been impressed by Sons and Lovers; Lawrence acquired an agent, J. B. Pinker, and a three-volume novel contract with Methuen. Back in England and living in London, he and Frieda married on 13 July 1914. Lawrence also compiled his short-story collection The Prussian Officer and other Stories, and met Catherine Carswell, Richard Aldington, and S. S. Koteliansky, all of whom remained his friends for life.
The Lawrences had intended to return to Italy, but the outbreak of war saw The Wedding Ring returned by Methuen and travel abroad impossible. For the rest of the year they lived in Buckinghamshire, near Murry and Katherine Mansfield, and here Lawrence first fantasized a community (Rananim) which he would occupy with friends like the Murrys and Koteliansky; a fantasy which would constantly recur, shift focus, and be remade over the next ten years. In Buckinghamshire, too, he wrote his Study of Thomas Hardy before starting yet another revision of his novel, this time turning its first half into The Rainbow and leaving the rest of the material (Ursula's and Gudrun's marriages) on one side. Lawrence was now starting to move in circles centred on Garsington Manor and Lady Ottoline Morrell; he met (and thoroughly impressed) Bertrand Russell and E. M. Forster, and later befriended Philip Heseltine (Peter Warlock), the young Aldous Huxley, and the painters Mark Gertler and Dorothy Brett. In March 1915 he finished The Rainbow, and remarked 'Now off and away to find the pots of gold at its feet' (Letters, 2.299). He planned a lecture course with Bertrand Russell, and in the autumn started a magazine, The Signature, with Murry and Katherine Mansfield.
But all these developments came to nothing. The Signature folded; he quarrelled with Russell; Methuen published The Rainbow in September 1915, but it got savage reviews, most of which attacked what was understood as the book's overt sexuality, and it was withdrawn from sale. At Bow Street magistrates' court on 13 November it was banned as obscene (Lawrence having no opportunity to defend it). Its religious language, emotional and sexual explorations of experience, and sheer length had given its readers problems, but it was Ursula's lesbian encounter with a schoolteacher in the chapter 'Shame' which had finally condemned it in the eyes of the law and of a country now focused on conflict: 'A thing like The Rainbow has no right to exist in the wind of war', one review had said (Kinkead-Weekes, 277). Lawrence's career as a writer was catastrophically damaged; he had already thought of going to America to start again there, though at this stage he elected to stay in England. But after the Rainbow disaster he left London to live in Cornwall: 'a temporary refuge until they could get out of England altogether' (ibid., 296). The idea of leaving his country marked the first stage of his major disillusionment with what England offered him, and with what he could do for it as a writer. He felt profoundly rejected; he responded with anger and a retreat into a world as much his own as he could make it.
War
Lawrence had declared in January 1915 that 'The War finished me: it was the spear through the side of all sorrows and hopes' (Letters, 2.268), and not just of his hopes of returning to Italy, or of living happily with Frieda, or working as a writer, though all these things were affected by changes in the world between 1914 and 1918. Rather, the war also seems to have killed his belief in the potential goodness and progress of his own civilization. Lawrence had formulated such a response to the war long before there was much fighting (he was never a pacifist like Bertrand Russell); it was a reaction to the very idea of the war rather than to anything which happened in it. His disillusion with what he saw as the mob spirit and the authoritarian rule of his own country affected the rest of his life and writing career, but the war's main effect at this stage was to sharpen his own sense of isolation.
Lawrence was ill when first in Cornwall, and the problem of earning enough to keep Frieda and himself preoccupied him. He remained resourceful, and Pinker did what he could to help; Lawrence published his first travel book, Twilight in Italy, in June 1916, and between 1916 and 1919 brought out four books of poetry, including Amores and his verse narrative of love and marriage, Look! We have Come Through! In spite of what he feared would be the fate of his fiction after The Rainbow, in spring 1916 he started again on the 'Sisters' material; after an enormous creative effort in which he wrote the whole book twice he had finished the first version of Women in Love by November 1916. But it was rejected by every publisher who saw it; the fact that it contained recognizable re-creations of several people (including Russell, Heseltine, and the Morrells) did not help; nor did its vivid portrayal of what one publisher's reader called 'the writer's expressions of antipathy to England and the forms of English civilisation' (introduction, Women in Love, xxxiv). To Lawrence it was a novel in which 'I have knocked the first loop-hole in the prison where we are all shut up' (Letters, 2.663), but it would not be published for another four years.
Lawrence and Frieda stayed on in Cornwall, living as cheaply as they could. Early in 1917 they made another, more serious attempt to be allowed to go to America, but they could not obtain passports. To make matters worse, in October 1917 they were expelled from Cornwall; the military authorities objected to a suspect writer and an enemy alien living near shipping lanes where German submarines were inflicting heavy losses on allied ships. This confirmed Lawrence's sense of alienation from his country; what role could he now play, except that of an outsider? All the Lawrences could now afford to do was to live precariously in friends' flats and country cottages. In the summer of 1917 Lawrence had completed a major revision of Women in Love; it was the novel which represented his last comprehensive attempt to write for his country, as it examined and characterized contemporary anxiety and conflict.
By 1918 Lawrence was back in the midlands, at Middleton by Wirksworth, living in a cottage paid for by his sister Ada, and the English Review published the first versions of what became Studies of Classic American Literature, his pioneering study of the great eighteenth- and nineteenth-century American writers. Lawrence also wrote essays, the play Touch and Go, and poems; his new publisher, Martin Secker, also published New Poems, and he wrote the first version of his short novel The Fox. The death of his old friend and neighbour Frankie Cooper in Eastwood, however, brought back poignantly his hatred of the midlands. He was himself desperately ill again in the influenza outbreak of February 1919, and only just pulled through; he was reduced to writing a school history book for money. Only in the summer of 1919 did he start to regain what he felt was his freedom. In the autumn Frieda returned to Germany to see her surviving family (her father had died in 1915), while Lawrence finally scraped together what money he had, and left England for Italy. It was the real end of his life rooted in England. Italy in 1912 had been a radical new experience; it was now a place to go when his relationship with England was finished.
Farewell to Europe
The first four months of Lawrence's return to Europe saw him going steadily further south. After a brief return visit to Fiascherino, he went on to Florence, making contact with the writer Norman Douglas and the latter's friend the American writer Maurice Magnus; he joined Frieda and then together they tried Picinisco, in the Abruzzi Mountains, where an English friend, Rosalind Baynes, had thought of living. But although it provided a wonderful setting for the last part of The Lost Girl, it proved impossibly cold and remote; they went further south still, to Capri, where the English writing colony, including Compton Mackenzie and Francis Brett Young, made them welcome; and finally, in February 1920, they went down to Sicily, to the Fontana Vecchia on the outskirts of Taormina. Here Lawrence and Frieda lived for almost two years, and he got down to some serious work. He had been writing the essays of Psychoanalysis and the Unconscious, a sustained attack on Freud; he now wrote The Lost Girl (which drew on the 'Insurrection' novel from 1913), and arranged for the publication of Women in Love in America with a new publisher, Thomas Seltzer, and in England with Secker. He also worked at a novel unfinished since 1917, Aaron's Rod, and started a new book, Mr Noon, but did not finish that either. He was clearly full of ideas for novels after the lean years of the war. In its fragmentary state Mr Noon constitutes a sardonic critique of the contemporary novel-reading public's supposed sensitivities and frailties, as well as providing a vivid recreation of his first months of passionate attraction to Frieda back in 1912, seen from the perspective of a writer who no longer believed in love. In the late summer of 1920 he had a very brief affair with Rosalind Baynes, now living near Florence, but such a relationship made no difference to his commitment to marriage; nor would it have had anything, he hoped, to do with love. A number of his poems in Birds, Beasts and Flowers, especially in the section 'Tortoises', drew on the affair, and his continuing sense of apartness. Although about this time he added some new friends, Earl and Achsah Brewster, to those whose company he enjoyed (and who would remain important for the rest of his life), his separateness as man and writer grew steadily more marked.
In January 1921 Lawrence and Frieda visited Sardinia and he wrote the second of his travel books, Sea and Sardinia, an acute and often very funny diary of the journey. He also found himself able that spring to complete Aaron's Rod, the novel he had been struggling with, in which a working-class musician manages to leave his wife, family, and England, and to live by his art. In this and subsequent novels Lawrence's voice often, quite consciously, came from the sidelines; in them he would stage guerrilla attacks as well as full-frontal assaults; his writing would be goading, insistent, revelatory. In Aaron's Rod he went closer than ever before to writing directly about sexual experience (Seltzer and Secker heavily censored the passages describing Aaron's affair with the marchesa). Like Women in Love it received a mixture of enthusiastic and bewildered reviews: Middleton Murry had declared that Women in Love showed Lawrence 'far gone in the maelstrom of his sexual obsession' but called the new book 'the most important thing that has happened to English literature since the war' (introduction, Aaron's Rod, xlii). To most reviewers, however, it was simply another interesting book made rather unpleasant by Lawrence's obsession with sex.
In the autumn of 1921 Lawrence wrote Fantasia of the Unconscious, a more light-hearted successor to Psychoanalysis and the Unconscious. At the end of 1921 his thorough revision of the short novels The Fox, The Captain's Doll, and The Ladybird showed him working in a new form and with extreme intensity. He also revised all his stories of the war years to create the collection England, my England and other Stories: a way of coming to terms with the past, and putting it behind him. After Maurice Magnus's suicide Lawrence wrote an introduction to Magnus's book about the foreign legion. One of Lawrence's finest pieces of writing, it concentrates on a writer who struggled to articulate what he experienced, and who lived by his wits on the outskirts of conventional society (Magnus was clearly someone in whom Lawrence saw reflections of himself and his own career).
Lawrence found Sicily wonderful, perhaps because it represented a final toe-hold on Europe: the Fontana Vecchia, the garden, the sun, the prospect out over the Mediterranean made it the place where he had been happier to live than anywhere since Cornwall. But by the end of 1921 he was determined to move on and go to America, his ambition for eight years now. In the event, the contact he had with the American hostess Mabel Dodge Sterne and her friends in the artists' colony of Taos in New Mexico made him decide to go first to Ceylon, to visit the Brewsters, before approaching America from the west coast. In February 1922 he and Frieda set out for Ceylon.
Round the world and back again
Ceylon was too hot for Lawrence and in most ways a disappointment; he wrote little, which was unusual for him, except letters and his translation of Giovanni Verga; but a previously unconsidered diversion to Australia, provoked by contacts made on the voyage to Colombo, led to an unexpected and (in terms of writing) immensely worthwhile visit. After a brief stay in Western Australia, where they met the writer Mollie Skinner, the Lawrences settled on the coast south of Sydney, at Thirroul; and here, in six weeks, Lawrence wrote his novel Kangaroo, drawing upon his experience of Europe in the new context of Australia; the long chapter 'The Nightmare' was a retrospective on what had happened to him during the war, and how his character Richard Somers—in many ways an alter ego—now felt 'Without a people, without a land. So be it. He was broken apart, apart he would remain' (Kangaroo, 1994, 259). In this novel he questioned the very nature of the novel form, with one chapter reprinting pieces of newspaper in collage fashion, another laconically starting 'Chapter follows chapter, and nothing doing' (ibid., 284).
In Australia the Lawrences saw almost nobody; in America they were plunged into activity after activity. After meeting the poet Witter Bynner and his companion Willard (Spud) Johnson in Santa Fe, in New Mexico, Mabel Sterne and her Indian lover Tony took them around by car from Taos; they visited an Apache reservation and Taos pueblo and saw Indian dances, and Mabel did her best to persuade Lawrence to write both about her and about the American south-west (part of her mission in bringing him there had been to have him re-create the place in his writing). Lawrence and Frieda both reacted strongly against her, however, and spent the winter of 1922–3 at the Del Monte ranch on Lobo Mountain, out of the orbit of Mabel so far as they could manage it; two Danish painter friends (Knud Merrild and Kai Götzsche) lived with them. While up at the ranch Lawrence managed a final reworking of the much revised Studies, shortening and Americanizing the studies in accordance with his new experience. He also finished his poetry collection Birds, Beasts and Flowers, which represents the best and most innovative of his poetry writing.
In the spring of 1923 the Lawrences went down to Mexico with Bynner and Johnson; they visited historical sites, ending up living beside Lake Chapala; and here Lawrence began 'Quetzalcoatl', the novel of the American continent which he had not managed to write in Taos. This first draft of what became The Plumed Serpent occupied him until he and Frieda decided they should go to New York to see Seltzer (currently publishing book after book by Lawrence), and in order to go back to Europe. Frieda was especially anxious to see her children, as two of them were now aged twenty-one or over, and she could see them freely for the first time since 1912. Lawrence, however, could not face Europe and stayed behind in America, after one of their most serious quarrels. After a few months wandering down the west coast in the company of Götzsche (and turning a novel by Mollie Skinner into one for which he was equally responsible, The Boy in the Bush), he resolved to return briefly to Europe. He was in England only for a couple of months; but in a traumatic and significant move, having invited his London friends to dinner at the Café Royal, he invited them to come back to New Mexico with him and Frieda. He felt committed, as has been pointed out, to 'establishing a new life on earth' (Ellis, 151); the final version of his idea for communal living, however, came to nothing. Dorothy Brett was the only one to accept (Middleton Murry said yes, but had decided not to come). After Lawrence and Frieda had been to Germany to see Frieda's mother (of whom Lawrence was increasingly fond), Brett accompanied the Lawrences back to America in March 1924.
This time they resolved to live the life of the ranch from the start, and on a small and partly derelict property given to Frieda by Mabel (Lawrence insisted on paying for it with the manuscript of Sons and Lovers) they spent a busy time getting the cabins ready; and then, with the hard physical work done, Lawrence devoted himself to writing. In an amazingly short time he produced three of his greatest works of the American continent: St. Mawr, 'The Woman who Rode Away', and 'The Princess'. His work was, however, succeeded in August by his first bronchial haemorrhage, perhaps aggravated by the altitude of over 7000 feet. When he felt better, all three of them went down to Mexico in October, where Lawrence wanted to finish The Plumed Serpent. They settled in Oaxaca, Lawrence deliberately choosing a far less Europeanized town than Chapala.
Lawrence wrote the whole novel again, composing his Mornings in Mexico essays in the interim, as a kind of light relief. In many ways this was his most ambitious novel since Women in Love; it attempted to create the sense of a whole society, and of how religion could bring change to society—but it was achieved at a dreadful cost of health and spirits, and perhaps in disregard of his own disillusion with both society and Mexico. No sooner had he completed the novel than he went down with a combination of typhoid and pneumonia, and nearly died. After they had struggled back to Mexico City, Lawrence relapsed, and a doctor diagnosed tuberculosis. Lawrence and Frieda had planned to return to England, but the doctor advised altitude, and they made their way back up to the ranch.
Amazingly, over the summer of 1925 Lawrence recovered much of his health, though he was never so well again as during the strenuous spring and summer of 1924; he compiled the essays in Reflections on the Death of a Porcupine, and also wrote his last play, David. On the ranch, well away from civilization, the Lawrences and Brett lived close to the wildness of nature, although such a life was necessarily always a struggle, and physically demanding. Lawrence wrote in an essay of 1928 how 'New Mexico was the greatest experience from the outside world that I have ever had' (Phoenix, 142), but it was also too much for him. His and Frieda's visas limited how long they could stay in the USA, and in September they travelled back to Europe, Lawrence always hoping he would one day be able to return.
Struggle
It was not long before Lawrence and Frieda were back in Italy, this time in Spotorno, where Lawrence wrote the first version of his short novel Sun, drawing on memories of the Fontana Vecchia. Their landlord at Spotorno was Angelo Ravagli, to whom Frieda was soon attracted, and with whom she lived after Lawrence's death. (Ravagli and Frieda were married in 1950.) To Spotorno came Frieda's daughters too (she could now see her youngest, Barby, as well as Elsa); and Lawrence put their experiences to good use in his short novel The Virgin and the Gipsy which, however, he resolved not to publish (it was too satirical of Ernest Weekley in its portrayal of the Revd Arthur Saywell). A visit from his own sister Ada in the spring of 1926 precipitated another dreadful quarrel with Frieda; he left for a month, to visit the Brewsters and to see Brett, who was back from America for a European holiday. He probably had some kind of brief sexual relationship with Brett at this point before returning to Frieda. They settled down again in a new place, the Villa Mirenda near Florence, in a new mood of reconciliation.
Lawrence's tuberculosis was now a real problem, but he was convinced that he should neither go to a sanatorium nor submit to surgery. He gave good advice to Gertie Cooper, who lived with his sister Ada and her husband, and who was also tubercular, but privately resolved that he himself would stay independent for as long as he could. He had always been good at taking care of himself in sickness and health, and nowhere is this clearer than in his determination during the last years of his life. The word 'tuberculosis' was, indeed, not permitted; he suffered, he insisted, from dreadful bronchials, remarking irritably that 'I have had bronchitis since I was a fortnight old' (Worthen, Early Years, 6). A visit to England during the coal strike of 1926 brought his last opportunity to see his old haunts, and it was probably this experience which prompted the first version of Lady Chatterley's Lover, one of several works revisiting the themes and places of his youth, and the problems of his own early life. His sympathy was now far more with his father (who had died in 1924) than with his mother, and the novel's central character was thoroughly working-class. The second version, started in November 1926, made the novel sexually explicit; it became a hymn to the love-making of the couple, to the body of the man and the woman, for sexuality as it could potentially be between an independent working-class man and an independent upper-class woman. It was a final fictional reworking of a theme which he had always written about for the chance it gave him to concentrate on sexual attraction (and to some extent had enacted in his own life and relationships), but which he now returned to both polemically and nostalgically.
A revived friendship with Aldous and Maria Huxley turned out to be one of the sustaining elements in these difficult years. Lawrence also started to paint, and found it a compensation for much. Early in 1927 he finished the second version of Lady Chatterley's Lover and visited the Etruscan sites of central Italy with Earl Brewster; the trip gave rise to one of the most attractive books of his last years, Sketches of Etruscan Places, which developed the Lawrentian myth of the fulfilled body in the context of a beautifully imagined and recreated civilization. A rather similar work was The Escaped Cock, the first half of which showed Jesus, after the resurrection, valuing above all else the natural, phenomenal world about which Lawrence had always written so compellingly, and which was becoming increasingly important to him as he endured the progressive deteriorations of illness.
The publication (for subscribers) of the final version of Lady Chatterley's Lover—written in the astonishing time of just five weeks, in one of Lawrence's last great bursts of creative energy—also sustained him, as he overcame the difficulties lying in the way of an individual publishing and distributing his own book. With the help of the Florentine bookseller Pino Orioli, the handsome volume was printed in and distributed from Florence, and made Lawrence more money than he had ever imagined. In June he wrote the second part of The Escaped Cock, in which Jesus experiences sexual desire again, after the resurrection; another work of intense nostalgia for the body. Lawrence had, however, suffered more than one haemorrhage at the Mirenda, and always tended to distrust places where he had been seriously ill; he left Florence in the summer of 1928, just at the time when Lady Chatterley's Lover was making it possible for him to pay doctors' bills and live more comfortably (often in hotels) than his previously careful existence had allowed.
Dying game
Lawrence and Frieda tried living first at altitude in Switzerland, at Gsteig, and then went down to the Mediterranean island of Port Cros, but a small hotel in Bandol, in the south of France, by the sea, as in Fiascherino, Taormina, Thirroul, and Spotorno, suited Lawrence better than anywhere. He was now no longer writing fiction, but he created many of the poems in Pansies during winter 1928–9; he also wrote short personal articles for newspaper publication, as he targeted yet another audience with his writing. As a friend commented, 'he challenged everything' (Nehls, 2.318). The fact of his writing itself was rooted in opposition; he remarked to another friend that 'If there weren't so many lies in the world … I wouldn't write at all' (ibid., 3.293). In 1925 he had described his role as a writer as not to sit aloft or detached but increasingly to be 'in among the crowd, kicking their shins or cheering them on to some mischief or merriment' (Letters, 5.201); of all his books, Lady Chatterley's Lover most mischievously both attacked and cheered on its readers.
It turned out that Lady Chatterley's Lover was being extensively pirated in Europe and the USA. The theft irritated Lawrence, who had always meant to make the novel available in a cheap edition; in the spring of 1929, accordingly, he went to Paris to organize it. He was further stirred to action by the police seizure in England of the unexpurgated typescript of his volume of poems Pansies; meanwhile the exhibition of his paintings in London in summer 1929 (which he was too ill to attend) was raided by the police, and court hearings were necessary before the paintings could be returned to their owner. These irritations both provoked and stimulated Lawrence, as in his poem 'Innocent England':
Virginal, pure, policemen cameAnd hid their faces for very shame.
But in an increasingly desperate desire to find a place where his health would improve, he and Frieda visited Majorca, France, and Bavaria before they returned to Bandol for the winter. Beside the Mediterranean once again, he wrote Apocalypse, his last book about the European psyche and its needs, which had started as an introduction to a book by Frederick Carter; he also wrote the poems published posthumously as Last Poems (1932). He saw a good deal of the Huxleys and the Brewsters, who rallied round him and Frieda as his health failed.
In a final attempt to stave off his illness Lawrence agreed with an English doctor to spend a month doing nothing (after he had finished his poems and Apocalypse), but felt the action had had no result; consequently, at the start of February 1930, he went into the ominously named Ad Astra sanatorium in Vence. It was too late; he was terrifyingly thin, almost ethereal, virtually incapable of walking, and the doctors could do nothing for him. Determined, as he put it to Gertie Cooper, to 'die game' (Letters, 5.632), he discharged himself from the sanatorium on 1 March 1930, and Frieda helped him move into the Villa Robermond, a rented house in Vence. He was not going to die where he did not choose to live: it was his last independent act. He died on the evening of the following day, Sunday 2 March, and was buried in Vence cemetery on 4 March. In 1935, following cremation, his ashes were reportedly either taken to New Mexico, where they were mixed into concrete and kept in a 'chapel' at the Kiowa ranch, or scattered into the Mediterranean.
After life
When very young Lawrence was almost white-haired (Billy the White-Nob was one of his names at home); before the war, when first becoming known as a writer, he was red-moustached, pale-complexioned, with thick brown hair and bright eyes. He was a person of immense charm and strikingly attractive, not so much for his features as for his uncanny sympathy with and marvellously quick understanding of others. Someone as normally shrewd as Bertrand Russell was overwhelmed by his first encounter with Lawrence; 'he is amazing; he sees through and through one … He is infallible. He is like Ezekiel or some other Old Testament prophet' (Kinkead-Weekes, 190). Lawrence grew his famous red beard only in autumn 1914 and it quickly became the mark of his difference. In 1928 a vicious attack on Lady Chatterley's Lover referred to its author as 'this bearded satyr' (Nehls, 3.262), and the beard remains the characteristic identifying feature of Lawrence's posthumous self.
In spite of the notoriety of Lady Chatterley's Lover, Lawrence became really famous only after his death; and at first only briefly. The editor of the relevant Dictionary of National Biography supplement, J. R. H. Weaver, was squeezed rather reluctantly up to a longer word allowance in 1933 by the secretary to the Oxford University Press, who feared 'howls of execration' unless Lawrence received his due. 'I was full of doubt (and, I suppose, of prejudice—though I try not to be)', Weaver replied; 'I wondered what would be thought about him—even 20 years hence. However, a great deal is said about him now, and no doubt we ought to reflect that'. His reputation lapsed in the late 1930s: he had written too unconventionally and had made too many enemies, and numerous memoirs (mostly by women who had known him) published between 1930 and 1935 combined to make him appear an absurd rather than important figure. Penguin Books began to republish his work after the Second World War, and by the late 1950s he was widely seen as one of the great writers of the twentieth century; F. R. Leavis's D. H. Lawrence: Novelist (1956) had confirmed his new reputation. The prosecution of the Penguin edition of Lady Chatterley's Lover in 1960 led to a trial in which both academics and senior figures of the British establishment spoke on Lawrence's behalf; E. M. Forster, too, stood up for him. Films were made of his work; Jack Cardiff's Sons and Lovers of 1960 and Ken Russell's Women in Love of 1969 typified his new standing, with its use of leading contemporary actors such as Alan Bates and Glenda Jackson, and a script designed to shock and surprise; the filming of the naked wrestling of Birkin (Bates) and Gerald (Oliver Reed) was a landmark in what was publicly acceptable. Films of The Virgin and the Gipsy (1970) and a soft-porn version of Lady Chatterley's Lover (1980) confirmed, however, that it was Lawrence's standing as a supposed sexual specialist (to which he had objected in his own lifetime) which was primarily being exploited. By the mid-1970s Lawrence's reputation was in something of a decline. Feminist writing, such as Kate Millett's Sexual Politics (1970), denounced him for chauvinism, and while neither a modernist revolutionary like Joyce, nor—like Virginia Woolf—reacting as a woman against the social and literary world which confined her, Lawrence occupied a problematic position in the writing history of the century. He came to be unthinkingly branded both sexist and (because of his denunciations of democracy and mob-rule) fascist.
The republication of Lawrence's work in a scholarly edition by Cambridge University Press, and in particular the publication in full of his letters—one of his greatest achievements—suggest that he may be seen differently in future. He turns out to have been a writer far more concerned with the careful revision and linguistic precision of his work than his early reputation as an uneducated, spontaneous, and unthinking genius suggested; he was ahead of his time in many of his attitudes to the individual and society; he had an extraordinary range as a writer in many genres (novels, stories, travel books, poems, plays, and essays); he was also a writer who explored an extremely wide range of subjects, in particular the need for a language of relationship which involves the experience of the body, rather than any idea of love. He was precise about what he saw as the malign influence of Freud, never allied himself with the excesses of Nietzsche, and was strikingly modern in his expression of a need to be ecologically aware. He never believed in right-wing governments and hated the fascism he saw in the early and middle twenties in Italy and Germany, though he always believed in human beings' need for government and authority; his writing certainly concentrated on female sexuality, but that was his particular, and in his period a strikingly original, focus. What the feminism of the 1970s saw as an effort at phallic supremacy in his writing can also be seen as a strikingly ‘female’ account of sexuality, with its constant stress on the feelings rather than on observed sexual activity, and on intimacy and necessary opposition rather than on the superiority of one gender over the other. He was a writer who constantly struggled to find and to articulate the experience, not of a body or mind or spirit, but of the whole person. This was what he wrote about most magically and most tellingly, and what he attempted to remain true to in his own life. The last page of his last book, Apocalypse, written when he was confronting death, ended: 'the magnificent here and now of life in the flesh is ours, and ours alone, and ours only for a time. We ought to dance with rapture that we should be alive and in the flesh' (p. 149).
Sources
• The Cambridge edition of the letters of D. H. Lawrence, ed. J. T. Boulton and others, 8 vols. (1979–2000)
• Introduction, D. H. Lawrence, Sons and lovers, ed. H. Baron and C. Baron (1992)
• Introduction, D. H. Lawrence, Women in love, ed. D. Farmer, L. Vasey, and J. Worthen (1987)
• Introduction, D. H. Lawrence, Aaron's rod, ed. M. Kalnins (1988)
• Introduction, D. H. Lawrence, Kangaroo, ed. B. Steele (1994)
• D. H. Lawrence, Phoenix (1936)
• J. Worthern, The early years, 1885–1912 (1991), vol. 1 of The Cambridge biography: D. H. Lawrence, 1885–1930, ed. D. Ellis, M. Kinkead-Weekes, and J. Worthern (1991–8)
• M. Kinkead-Weekes, Triumph to exile, 1912–1922 (1996), vol. 2 of The Cambridge biography: D. H. Lawrence, 1885–1930, ed. D. Ellis, M. Kinkead-Weekes, and J. Worthern (1991–8)
• D. Ellis, Dying game, 1922–1930 (1998), vol. 3 of The Cambridge biography: D. H. Lawrence, 1885–1930, ed. D. Ellis, M. Kinkead-Weekes, and J. Worthern (1991–8)
• E. Nehls, ed., D. H. Lawrence: a composite biography, 3 vols. (1957–9)
• F. W. Roberts, A bibliography of D. H. Lawrence, rev. 2nd edn (1981)
• private information (2004)
• D. Brett, Lawrence and Brett: a friendship, ed. J. Manchester, rev. 2nd edn (1974)
• E. Brewster and A. Brewster, D. H. Lawrence: reminiscences and correspondence (1934)
• W. Bynner, Journey with genius: recollections and reflections concerning the D. H. Lawrences (1951)
• C. Carswell, The savage pilgrimage (1932)
• E. T. [J. Chambers], D. H. Lawrence: a personal record (1935)
• H. Corke, D. H. Lawrence: the Croydon years (1965)
• M. Green, The von Richthofen sisters: the triumphant and tragic modes of love (1974)
• F. Lawrence, Not I, but the wind (1934)
• F. Lawrence, The memoirs and correspondence, ed. E. W. Tedlock, American edn (1964)
• M. Luhan, Lorenzo in Taos (1933)
• H. T. Moore, The priest of love: a life of D. H. Lawrence (1974)
• J. M. Murry, Reminiscences of D. H. Lawrence (1933)
• R. Parmenter, Lawrence in Oaxaca: a quest for the novelist in Mexico (1984)
• P. Preston, A D. H. Lawrence chronology (1994)
• K. Sagar, D. H. Lawrence: a calendar of his works (1979)
• R. Spencer, D. H. Lawrence country (1980)
• J. Worthen, D. H. Lawrence: a literary life (1989)"
FYI COL Mikel J. Burroughs SMSgt Lawrence McCarter SPC Michael Duricko, Ph.D GySgt Thomas Vick SGT Denny Espinosa SSG Stephen Rogerson SPC Matthew Lamb LTC (Join to see)Maj Bill Smith, Ph.D. MAJ Dale E. Wilson, Ph.D. PO1 William "Chip" Nagel PO2 (Join to see) SSG Franklin Briant SPC Woody Bullard TSgt David L. SMSgt David A Asbury SPC Michael Terrell SFC Chuck Martinez CPT Richard Trione
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Visiting The Secret Country Retreat of Novelist D.H. Lawrence | Ancient Tracks | Timeline
This week, Tony discovers an ancient shark tooth, and takes us on a mountain hike to the secret country retreat of novelist and poet D.H Lawrence. It's li...
Visiting The Secret Country Retreat of Novelist D.H. Lawrence | Ancient Tracks | Timeline
This week, Tony discovers an ancient shark tooth, and takes us on a mountain hike to the secret country retreat of novelist and poet D.H Lawrence.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L4HKCb37Jpg
Images:
1. David & Frieda Lawrence
2. 1914 John Middleton Murry, Frieda and David Herbert Lawrence, probably on Frieda's & D.H's wedding day.
3. David Herbert Lawrence 'Never trust the artist. Trust the tale. The proper function of the critic is to save the tale from the artist who created it.'
Background from {[https://spartacus-educational.com/JlawrenceDH.htm]}
David Herbert Lawrence, the fourth of the five children of Arthur John Lawrence (1846–1924), a miner, was born in Eastwood near Nottingham on 11th September, 1885. His father was barely literate, but his mother, Lydia Lawrence, was better educated and was determined that David and his brothers should not become miners.
According to his biographer, John Worthen: "Arthur Lawrence, like his three brothers, was a coalminer who worked from the age of ten until he was sixty-six, was very much at home in the small mining town, and was widely regarded as an excellent workman and cheerful companion. Lawrence's mother Lydia was the second daughter of Robert Beardsall and his wife, Lydia Newton of Sneinton; originally lower middle-class, the Beardsalls had suffered financial disaster in the 1860s and Lydia, in spite of attempts to work as a pupil teacher, had, like her sisters, been forced into employment as a sweated home worker in the lace industry. But she had had more education than her husband, and passed on to her children an enduring love of books, a religious faith, and a commitment to self-improvement, as well as a profound desire to move out of the working class in which she felt herself trapped."
As a child Lawrence preferred the company of girls to boys and this led to him being bullied at school. He was an intelligent boy and at the age of 12 he became the first boy from Eastwood to win one of the recently established county council scholarships, and went to Nottingham High School. However, he did not get on with the other boys and left school in the summer of 1901 without qualifications.
Lawrence started work as a factory clerk for a surgical appliances manufacturer in Nottingham. Soon afterwards, his eldest brother, William Ernest Lawrence, by now a successful clerk in London, fell ill and died on 11th October 1901. Lydia Lawrence was distraught with the loss of her favourite son and now turned her attention to the career of David. John Worthen argues that "she needed her children to make up for the disappointments of her life." David now gave up his employment as a clerk and started work as a pupil teacher at the school in Eastwood for miner's children.
Lawrence became friendly with Jessie Chambers. Her sister, Ann Chambers Howard, has argued: "They spent a great deal of time together working and reading, walking through the fields and woods, talking and discussing. Jessie was interested in everything, to such a degree that her intensity of perception almost amounted to a form of worship. She felt that her own appreciation of beauty, of poetry, of people, and of her own sorrows amounted to something far greater than anyone else had ever experienced. Her depth of felling was a great stimulation to Lawrence, who with his naturally sensitive mind was roused to critical and creative consciousness by her." Together they developed an interest in literature. This included reading books together and discussing authors and writing. It was under Jessie's influence that in 1905 Lawrence started to write poetry. Lawrence later admitted that Jessie was "the anvil on which I hammered myself out." The following year he began work on his first novel, The White Peacock
Lawrence's mother wanted him to continue his education and in 1906 he began studying for his teacher's certificate at the University College of Nottingham. In 1908 Lawrence qualified as a teacher and found employment at Davidson Road School in Croydon. According to the author of D. H. Lawrence: The Life of an Outsider (2005): "He found the demands of teaching in a large school in a poor area very different from those at Eastwood under a protective headmaster. Nevertheless he established himself as an energetic teacher, ready to use new teaching methods (Shakespeare lessons became practical drama classes, for example)."
In 1909 Jessie Chambers sent some of Lawrence's poems to Ford Madox Ford, the editor of The English Review. Ford was greatly impressed with the poems and arranged a meeting with Lawrence. After reading the manuscript of The White Peacock, wrote to the publisher William Heinemann recommending it. Ford also encouraged Lawrence to write about his mining background.
While living in Croydon Lawrence became friendly with a fellow schoolteacher, Helen Corke, who had recently had an affair with a married man who killed himself. She told Lawrence the story, and showed him her manuscript, The Freshwater Diary. Lawrence used this material for his next novel, The Trespasser.
FYI Sgt John H. SGM Bill FrazerCSM (Join to see)SSG Jeffrey LeakeSSG Paul HeadleeSGM Major StroupeCPL Michael PeckSSG Jeff Furgerson]Sgt (Join to see)PO1 Steve Ditto SPC Michael Terrell CPL Douglas ChryslerSP5 Geoffrey Vannerson LTC John Shaw SPC Matthew Lamb SSG Robert WebsterSFC Bernard Walko SSG Michael Noll SSG William Jones Maj Marty Hogan
This week, Tony discovers an ancient shark tooth, and takes us on a mountain hike to the secret country retreat of novelist and poet D.H Lawrence.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L4HKCb37Jpg
Images:
1. David & Frieda Lawrence
2. 1914 John Middleton Murry, Frieda and David Herbert Lawrence, probably on Frieda's & D.H's wedding day.
3. David Herbert Lawrence 'Never trust the artist. Trust the tale. The proper function of the critic is to save the tale from the artist who created it.'
Background from {[https://spartacus-educational.com/JlawrenceDH.htm]}
David Herbert Lawrence, the fourth of the five children of Arthur John Lawrence (1846–1924), a miner, was born in Eastwood near Nottingham on 11th September, 1885. His father was barely literate, but his mother, Lydia Lawrence, was better educated and was determined that David and his brothers should not become miners.
According to his biographer, John Worthen: "Arthur Lawrence, like his three brothers, was a coalminer who worked from the age of ten until he was sixty-six, was very much at home in the small mining town, and was widely regarded as an excellent workman and cheerful companion. Lawrence's mother Lydia was the second daughter of Robert Beardsall and his wife, Lydia Newton of Sneinton; originally lower middle-class, the Beardsalls had suffered financial disaster in the 1860s and Lydia, in spite of attempts to work as a pupil teacher, had, like her sisters, been forced into employment as a sweated home worker in the lace industry. But she had had more education than her husband, and passed on to her children an enduring love of books, a religious faith, and a commitment to self-improvement, as well as a profound desire to move out of the working class in which she felt herself trapped."
As a child Lawrence preferred the company of girls to boys and this led to him being bullied at school. He was an intelligent boy and at the age of 12 he became the first boy from Eastwood to win one of the recently established county council scholarships, and went to Nottingham High School. However, he did not get on with the other boys and left school in the summer of 1901 without qualifications.
Lawrence started work as a factory clerk for a surgical appliances manufacturer in Nottingham. Soon afterwards, his eldest brother, William Ernest Lawrence, by now a successful clerk in London, fell ill and died on 11th October 1901. Lydia Lawrence was distraught with the loss of her favourite son and now turned her attention to the career of David. John Worthen argues that "she needed her children to make up for the disappointments of her life." David now gave up his employment as a clerk and started work as a pupil teacher at the school in Eastwood for miner's children.
Lawrence became friendly with Jessie Chambers. Her sister, Ann Chambers Howard, has argued: "They spent a great deal of time together working and reading, walking through the fields and woods, talking and discussing. Jessie was interested in everything, to such a degree that her intensity of perception almost amounted to a form of worship. She felt that her own appreciation of beauty, of poetry, of people, and of her own sorrows amounted to something far greater than anyone else had ever experienced. Her depth of felling was a great stimulation to Lawrence, who with his naturally sensitive mind was roused to critical and creative consciousness by her." Together they developed an interest in literature. This included reading books together and discussing authors and writing. It was under Jessie's influence that in 1905 Lawrence started to write poetry. Lawrence later admitted that Jessie was "the anvil on which I hammered myself out." The following year he began work on his first novel, The White Peacock
Lawrence's mother wanted him to continue his education and in 1906 he began studying for his teacher's certificate at the University College of Nottingham. In 1908 Lawrence qualified as a teacher and found employment at Davidson Road School in Croydon. According to the author of D. H. Lawrence: The Life of an Outsider (2005): "He found the demands of teaching in a large school in a poor area very different from those at Eastwood under a protective headmaster. Nevertheless he established himself as an energetic teacher, ready to use new teaching methods (Shakespeare lessons became practical drama classes, for example)."
In 1909 Jessie Chambers sent some of Lawrence's poems to Ford Madox Ford, the editor of The English Review. Ford was greatly impressed with the poems and arranged a meeting with Lawrence. After reading the manuscript of The White Peacock, wrote to the publisher William Heinemann recommending it. Ford also encouraged Lawrence to write about his mining background.
While living in Croydon Lawrence became friendly with a fellow schoolteacher, Helen Corke, who had recently had an affair with a married man who killed himself. She told Lawrence the story, and showed him her manuscript, The Freshwater Diary. Lawrence used this material for his next novel, The Trespasser.
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LTC Stephen F.
Inaugural D.H. Lawrence Lecture
Lobo Living Room presents the Inaugural D.H. Lawrence lecture. Mark Doty, National Book Award winner and poet, delvers the keynote lecture. Mark Doty is the ...
Inaugural D.H. Lawrence Lecture
Lobo Living Room presents the Inaugural D.H. Lawrence lecture. Mark Doty, National Book Award winner and poet, delvers the keynote lecture. Mark Doty is the author of nine books of poetry, including Deep Lane (April 2015), Fire to Fire: New and Selected Poems, which won the 2008 National Book Award, and My Alexandria, winner of the Los Angeles Times Book Prize, the National Book Critics Circle Award, and the T.S. Eliot Prize in the UK. He is also the author of three memoirs: The New York Times-bestselling Dog Years, Firebird, and Heaven’s Coast, as well as a book about craft and criticism, The Art of Description: World Into Word. Doty has received two NEA fellowships, Guggenheim and Rockefeller Foundation Fellowships, a Lila Wallace/Readers Digest Award, and the Witter Bynner Prize
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WNEex3g3sVE
Images:
1. 1914 David Herbert and Frieda Lawrence with Katherine Mansfield and John Middleton Murry
2. D.H. Lawrence 'There is only one thing that a man really wants to do, all his life and that is, to find his way to his God, his Morning Star'.
3. David Herbert Lawrence 21 years old in 1906
https://www.newworldencyclopedia.org/entry/D._H._Lawrence
David Herbert Lawrence (September 11, 1885 – March 2, 1930) was an important and controversial English writer of the twentieth century, and one of the most important writers in English Modernism. Lawrence was a prolific artist, with his output spanning novels, short stories, poems, plays, essays, travel books, paintings, translations, literary criticism and personal letters. Lawrence is primarily remembered today for pushing the limits of what was acceptable in literary fiction; while other Modernists, like Joyce and Woolf, were content to radicalize the forms of literature, Lawrence was committed to expanding the range of literary subject-matter. In particular, he incorporated Freudian psychoanalysis, frank descriptions of sexuality, and mystical religious themes into his works that were quite shocking to the audiences of his time. Many of Lawrence's works were banned or left unpublished during his life and, like Lord Byron, Lawrence only gained the recognition he deserved in the decades following his death.
Although he is now esteemed as one of the most important figures in the early history of Modernism, Lawrence remains controversial, and deservedly so. His prodigious output is notoriously uneven; and Lawrence, laboring in obscurity, never lived long enough to refine some of his wilder fancies into coherent ideas. Other critics deride Lawrence's explicitness, and it is true that some of his lesser works were written more to shock than to truly enlighten the mind with the brilliance of art. Nonetheless, Lawrence was a genius of the highest order, and his most exemplary poems and novels are among the most influential works of twentieth-century literature. Even so, it can be argued that for all his literary genius, much of what followed from his influence ended up to be detrimental to society.
Life
Early life (1885-1912)
The fourth child of Arthur John Lawrence, an illiterate miner, and Lydia, née Beardsall, a former schoolmistress, David Herbert Richards Lawrence was born and spent his formative years in the coal mining town of Eastwood, Nottinghamshire, United Kingdom. His working class background and the tensions between his mismatched parents provided the raw material for a number of his early works and Lawrence would return to Eastwood, which he was to call "the country of my heart."[1], as a setting for much of his fiction.
The young Lawrence attended Beauvale Board School from 1891 until 1898, becoming the first local pupil to win a County Council scholarship to Nottingham High School in
nearby Nottingham. He left in 1901, working for three months as a junior clerk at Haywood's surgical appliances factory before a severe bout of pneumonia ended this career. While convalescing he often visited Haggs Farm, the home of the Chambers family, beginning a friendship with Jessie Chambers. In the years 1902 to 1906 Lawrence served as a teacher at the British School, Eastwood. He went on to become a full-time student and received a teaching certificate from University College, Nottingham in 1908. During these early years he was working on his first poems, some short stories, and a draft of a novel, Laetitia, that was eventually to become The White Peacock. At the end of 1907 he won a short story competition in the Nottingham Guardian, the first time that he had gained any wider recognition for his literary talents.
In the autumn of 1908 the newly qualified Lawrence left his childhood home for London. While teaching in Davidson Road School, Croydon he continued his writing. Some of the early poetry, submitted by Jessie Chambers, came to the attention of Ford Madox Ford, also known as Ford Madox Hueffer, editor of the influential The English Review. Hueffer commissioned the story Odour of Chrysanthemums. Upon its publication in the Review, Heinemann, a London publisher, was encouraged to ask Lawrence for more work. Lawrence's career as a professional author now began in earnest, although he taught for one year further. Shortly after the final proofs of his first published novel The White Peacock appeared in 1910, Lawrence's mother died. She had been ill with cancer. The young man was devastated and he was to describe the next few months as "his sick year."
During 1911 Lawrence was introduced to Edward Garnett, a publisher's reader, who acted as a mentor, providing further encouragement and becoming a valued friend. Throughout these months the young author revised Paul Morel, the first sketch of what was to become Sons and Lovers. In addition, a teaching colleague, Helen Corke, gave him access to her intimate diaries about an unhappy love affair, which formed the basis of The Trespasser, his second novel. In November 1911 pneumonia struck once again. After recovering his health Lawrence decided to abandon teaching in order to become a full-time author.
Blithe spirits (1912-1914)
In March 1912 the author met the free spirited woman with whom he was to share the rest of his life. She was six years older than her new lover, married and with three young children. Frieda Weekley née von Richthofen was then the wife of Lawrence's former modern languages professor from Nottingham University, Ernest Weekley. She eloped with Lawrence to her parent's home in Metz, a garrison town in Germany near the disputed border with France. Their stay here included Lawrence's first brush with militarism when he was arrested and accused of being a British spy, before being released following an intervention from Frieda's father. After this encounter Lawrence left for a small hamlet to the south of Munich where he was joined by Frieda for their 'honeymoon', later memorialized in the series of love poems entitled Look! We Have Come Through (1917).
From Germany they walked southwards across the Alps to Italy, a journey that was recorded in the first of his brilliant travel books, a collection of linked essays entitled Twilight in Italy and the unfinished novel, Mr Noon. During his stay in Italy, Lawrence completed the final version of Sons and Lovers, a vivid portrait of the realities of working-class provincial life published in 1913. The couple returned to England in 1913 for a short visit. Lawrence now encountered and befriended John Middleton Murry, the critic, and the short story writer from New Zealand, Katherine Mansfield. Lawrence and Frieda soon went back to Italy, staying in a cottage in Fiascherino on the Gulf of Spezia. Here he started writing the first draft of a work of fiction that was to be transformed into two of his finest novels, The Rainbow and Women in Love. Eventually Frieda obtained her divorce. The couple returned to England at the outbreak of World War I and were married on the 13 July, 1914.
The nightmare (1914-1919)
Frieda's German parentage and Lawrence's open contempt for the military meant that they were viewed with suspicion in wartime England and lived in near destitution. The Rainbow (1915) was suppressed after an investigation into its alleged obscenity in 1915. Later, they were even accused of spying and signalling to German submarines off of the coast of Cornwall where they lived at Zennor. During this period he finished a sequel to The Rainbow that many regard as his masterpiece. This radical new work, Women in Love, is a key text of European modernism. In it Lawrence explores the destructive features of contemporary civilization through the evolving relationships of four major characters as they reflect upon the value of the arts, politics, economics, sexual experience, friendship and marriage. This book is a bleak, bitter vision of humanity and proved impossible to publish in wartime conditions. It is now widely recognised as an English novel of great dramatic force and intellectual subtlety.
In late 1917, after constant harassment by the military authorities, Lawrence was forced to leave Cornwall at three days' notice under the terms of the Defence of the Realm Act (DORA). This persecution was later described in an autobiographical chapter of his Australian novel, Kangaroo, published in 1923.
The savage pilgrimage begins (1919-1922)
After the traumatic experience of the war years, Lawrence began what he termed his 'savage pilgrimage',[2]a time of voluntary exile. He escaped from England at the earliest practical opportunity, returning only twice for brief visits. He spent the remainder of his life travelling with Frieda, settling down for only short periods. This wanderlust took him to Italy, Ceylon (now called Sri Lanka), Australia, the United States, Mexico and after returning once more in Italy, southern France.
Lawrence abandoned England in November 1919 and headed south; first to the Abruzzi district in central Italy and then onwards to Capri and the Fontana Vecchia in Taormina, Sicily. From Sicily he made brief excursions to Sardinia, Monte Cassino, Malta, Northern Italy, Austria and Southern Germany. Many of these places appeared in his writings. New novels included The Lost Girl, Aaron's Rod and the fragment entitled Mr Noon (the first part of which was published in the Phoenix anthology of his works, and the entirety in 1984). He experimented with shorter novels or novellas, such as The Captain's Doll, The Fox and The Ladybird. In addition, some of his short stories were issued in the collection England, My England and Other Stories. During these years he produced a number of poems about the natural world in Birds, Beasts and Flowers; these poems are now recognized as one of Lawrence's highest achievements, as well as one of the earliest works of Modernism to take full advantage of the power of free verse. Lawrence's nature poetry, free of the controversies and complexities of his fiction, is perhaps his most enduring contribution to English letters.
Seeking a new world (1922-1925)
In late February 1922 the Lawrences left Europe behind with the intention of migrating to the United States. They sailed in an easterly direction, first to Ceylon and then on to Australia. A short residence in Western Australia was followed by a brief stop in New South Wales, during which Lawrence completed Kangaroo, a novel about local fringe politics that also revealed a lot about his wartime experiences in Cornwall.
Resuming their journey, Frieda and Lawrence finally arrived in the United States in September 1922. Here they considered establishing a utopian community on what was then known as the 160-acre Kiowa Ranch near Taos, New Mexico. By all accounts Lawrence loved this ranch high up in the mountains, the only home that he ever owned. He stayed in New Mexico for two years, taking extended visits into Mexico.
While in the New World, Lawrence rewrote and published his Studies in Classic American Literature, a set of critical essays begun in 1917, and later described by Edmund Wilson as "one of the few first-rate books that have ever been written on the subject." These provocative and original interpretations, with their insights into symbolism, Transcendentalism and the Puritan sensibility, were a significant factor in the revival of the reputation of Herman Melville during the early 1920s. In addition, Lawrence completed a number of new fictional works, including The Boy in the Bush, The Plumed Serpent, St Mawr, The Woman who Rode Away, The Princess. He also found time to produce some more travel writing, such as the collection of linked excursions that became Mornings in Mexico.
A brief voyage to England at the end of 1923 was a failure and he soon returned to Taos, convinced that his life as an author now lay in America. However, in March 1925 he suffered a near fatal attack of malaria and tuberculosis while on a third visit to Mexico. Although he eventually recovered, the diagnosis of his condition obliged him to return once again to Europe. He was dangerously ill and poor health limited the ability to travel for the remainder of his life.
Approaching death (1925-1930)
Lawrence and Frieda set up home in a villa in Northern Italy, living near Florence while he wrote The Virgin and the Gipsy and the various versions of Lady Chatterley's Lover (1928). This book, his last major novel, was initially published in private editions in Florence and Paris, reinforcing his notoriety.
The return to Italy allowed Lawrence to renew some of his old friendships and during these years he was particularly close to Aldous Huxley, a loyal companion who was to edit the first collection of Lawrence's letters after his death. With another friend, the artist Earl Brewster, Lawrence found time to visit a number of local archaeological sites in April 1927. The resulting essays describing these visits to old tombs were written up and collected together as Sketches of Etruscan Places, a beautiful book that contrasts the history of ancient Rome with the brutality of Mussolini's fascist Italy. Lawrence continued to produce fiction, including short stories and The Escaped Cock/The Man Who Died, an unorthodox reworking of the Christian belief of the resurrection that affirms Lawrence's bizarre and complex religious faith.
He continued to write despite his physical frailty. In his last months he authored numerous poems, reviews, essays, and a robust defense of his last novel against those who sought to suppress it. His last significant work was a spirited reflection on the New Testament Book of Revelation, St. John's Apocalypse. After being discharged from a sanatorium he died at the Villa Robermond, Vence, France in 1930 at the age of 44. Frieda returned to live on the ranch in Taos, and later her third husband brought Lawrence's ashes[3] to rest there in a small chapel set amid the mountains of New Mexico.
Posthumous reputation
The obituaries following Lawrence's death were, with the notable exception of E. M. Forster, largely unsympathetic, ill-informed or blatantly hostile. His longtime friend, Catherine Carswell, summed up his life in a letter to the periodical Time and Tide published on the 16th March 1930. In response to his mean-spirited critics she claimed:
In the face of formidable initial disadvantages and life-long delicacy, poverty that lasted for three quarters of his life and hostility that survives his death, he did nothing that he did not really want to do, and all that he most wanted to do he did... He wrote something like three dozen books, of which even the worst page dances with life that could be mistaken for no other man's, while the best are admitted, even by those who hate him, to be unsurpassed.
Works
Realism was the main feature of Lawrence's writings: he passionately believed that it was his duty, as a novelist, to present all the facts of life, and leave no aspect of reality hidden or obscured. As a result, at times he pushed the limits of taste; but he also expanded the boundaries of art. Like Balzac, Lawrence took it upon himself to create all-encompassing art; art that embraced, and investigated all the nuances of human experience.
Among his many works, most famous are his novels Sons and Lovers (1913), The Rainbow (1915), Women in Love (1920), and Lady Chatterley's Lover (1928). All of these major novels take place in and around Eastwood, Lawrence's grim birthplace, an industrial mining town. One of Lawrence's most important contributions to literature may be simply in his choice of setting; he was one of the first major English authors since Dickens to write literature of the working-classes.
Kangaroo, Aaron's Rod and The Plumed Serpent are usually considered together as Lawrence's "leadership novels" that contain a number of Lawrence's ideas on society, philosophy, and religion. As novels, these works are rather difficult and uneven, with Lawrence often sacrificing an interesting narrative for the sake of expressing his own obfuscated ideas. Nevertheless, these lesser-known works offer a captivating glimpse into Lawrence's development as a thinker, and offer the reader a much deeper sense of Lawrence's philosophical and ideological leanings.
Lady Chatterley's Lover is easily Lawrence's most famous novel. Though it was privately published in 1928, it remained unavailable to the general public until its publication by London based Penguin Books in 1960 caused a scandal due to its explicit sex scenes. An obscenity trial followed in Britain, and the novel become a rallying point for the budding youth culture of the 1960s. Penguin Books won the case, the novel was published, and, due to the scandal, became quite popular with rebellious youth.
What is often overlooked among the claims of Lawrence's obscenity is the fact that he was extremely religious. He found the cloistered Christianity of Europe to be confining, wishing to find spiritual rejuvenation through the innocence and simplicity of mystical and tribal religions. In reality, this search for a primeval religious experience was a large part of Lawrence's motivation for undertaking his "savage pilgrimage." His thought was also deeply influenced by contemporary philosophers and psychologists such as Nietzsche, Henri Bergson and others, as well as by the works of Sigmund Freud. Lawrence wished to free himself from the sexual mores of the past so that he could examine the role of sexuality in spiritual and religious experience, and it was quite likely that he might have been surprised about his role in the "sexual revolution" of the 1960s.
Poetry
Although best known for his novels, Lawrence wrote almost eight hundred poems, most of them relatively short. His poetry, over time, has risen in esteem among critics and scholars, and many now argue that Lawrence's poetry is much more consistent in quality than his sometimes manic fictions. His poetry, like that of many other Modernist poets, is highly experimental, and Lawrence was one of the first major English poets to use free verse to great effect.
Lawrence wrote his first poems in 1904 at the age of nineteen, and two of his poems, Dreams Old and Dreams Nascent, were among his earliest published works in The English Review. His early works clearly place him in the school of Georgian poets; a group named after King George V of the United Kingdom, but also connect him to the Romantic poets, most particularly Wordsworth, whose work they were trying to emulate. What typified the entire movement, and Lawrence's poems of the time, were well-worn poetic tropes and deliberately archaic language. Although strained and of lesser quality, these early works show Lawrence's unique voice in its earliest stages. Consider, for example, the following, rather racy, early excerpt;
It was the flank of my wife
I touched with my hand, I clutched with my hand,
rising, new-awakened from the tomb!
It was the flank of my wife
whom I married years ago
at whose side I have lain for over a thousand nights
and all that previous while, she was I, she was I;
I touched her, it was I who touched and I who was touched.
—excerpt New Heaven and Earth
Just as the First World War dramatically changed the work of many of the poets who saw service in the trenches, Lawrence's own work saw a dramatic change during his miserable war years in Cornwall. He had the works of Walt Whitman to thank for showing him the possibilities of free verse. He set forth his manifesto for much of his later verse in the introduction to New Poems:
"We can get rid of the stereotyped movements and the old hackneyed associations of sound or sense. We can break down those artificial conduits and canals through which we do so love to force our utterance. We can break the stiff neck of habit...But we cannot positively prescribe any motion, any rhythm."
Many of his later works lacked all rhyme and meter so that they were little different from short ideas or memos, which could well have been written in prose were it not for their lyric beauty and energy. Lawrence rewrote many of his novels several times to perfect them and similarly he returned to some of his early poems when they were collected in 1928. This was in part to fictionalize them, but also to remove some of the artifice of his first works. As he put it himself: "A young man is afraid of his demon and puts his hand over the demon's mouth sometimes and speaks for him." His best known poems are probably those dealing with nature such as those in Birds Beasts and Flowers and Tortoises. Snake, one of his most frequently anthologized poems, displays some of his most frequent concerns; modern man's distance from nature and subtle hints at religious themes:
A snake came to my water-trough
On a hot, hot day, and I in pyjamas for the heat,
To drink there.
In the deep, strange-scented shade of the great dark carob tree
I came down the steps with my pitcher
And must wait, must stand and wait, for there he was at the trough before me.
He reached down from a fissure in the earth-wall in the gloom
And trailed his yellow-brown slackness soft-bellied down, over the edge of
the stone trough
And rested his throat upon the stone bottom,
And where the water had dripped from the tap, in a small clearness,
He sipped with his straight mouth,
Softly drank through his straight gums, into his slack long body,
Silently.
Someone was before me at my water-trough,
And I, like a second comer, waiting.
He lifted his head from his drinking, as cattle do,
And looked at me vaguely, as drinking cattle do,
And flickered his two-forked tongue from his lips, and mused a moment,
And stooped and drank a little more,
Being earth-brown, earth-golden from the burning bowels of the earth
On the day of Sicilian July, with Etna smoking.
The voice of my education said to me
He must be killed,
For in Sicily the black, black snakes are innocent, the gold are venomous.
—excerpt Snake
Look! We have come through! is another major volume of poetry from the period at the end of the War, revealing another important element common to much of Lawrence's writings—his inclination to lay himself bare, and use his own biographical material for his art. Although Lawrence could be regarded as a writer of love poems, he usually deals in the less romantic aspects of love such as sexual frustration and thwarted desire. Ezra Pound in his Literary Essays complained of Lawrence's interest in his own "disagreeable sensations" but praised him for his "low-life narrative." This is a reference to Lawrence's dialect poems akin to the Scots poems of Robert Burns, in which he reproduced the language and concerns of the people of Nottinghamshire from his youth.
Tha thought tha wanted ter be rid o' me.
'Appen tha did, an' a'.
Tha thought tha wanted ter marry an' se
If ter couldna be master an' th' woman's boss,
Tha'd need a woman different from me,
An' tha knowed it; ay, yet tha comes across
Ter say goodbye! an' a'.
—excerpt The Drained Cup
Pound was the chief proponent of modernist poetry and although Lawrence's works after his Georgian period are clearly in the Modernist tradition, they were often very different to many other modernist writers. Modernist works were often austere, with every word meticulously chosen. Lawrence felt all poems had to be personal sentiments and that spontaneity was vital for any work. He called one collection of poems Pansies partly for the simple ephemeral nature of the verse but also a pun on the French verb panser, meaning to dress or bandage a wound. His wounds still needed soothing for the reception he regularly received in England, as the poems The Noble Englishman and Don't Look at Me were removed from the official edition of Pansies on the grounds of obscenity. Although he lived the life of a world traveler, Lawrence's poetry became controversial primarily because of his frequent criticisms of England's moral climate, as illustrated in the following late quotation:
O the stale old dogs who pretend to guard
the morals of the masses,
how smelly they make the great back-yard
wetting after everyone that passes.
—excerpt The Young and Their Moral Guardians
List of Lawrence's writings
• The White Peacock (1911), edited by Andrew Robertson, Cambridge University Press, 1983, ISBN [login to see]
• The Trespasser (1912), edited by Elizabeth Mansfield, Cambridge University Press,1981, ISBN [login to see]
• Sons and Lovers (1913), edited by Helen Baron and Carl Baron, Cambridge University Press, 1992, ISBN [login to see]
• The Rainbow (1915), edited by Mark Kinkead-Weekes, Cambridge University Press, 1989, ISBN [login to see]
• Women in Love (1920), edited by David Farmer, Lindeth Vasey and John Worthen, Cambridge University Press, 1987, ISBN [login to see]
• The Lost Girl (1920), edited by John Worthen, Cambridge University Press, 1981, ISBN 052122263X
• Aaron's Rod (1922) edited by Mara Kalnins, Cambridge University Press, 1988, ISBN [login to see]
• Kangaroo (1923) edited by Bruce Steele, Cambridge University Press, 1994, ISBN [login to see]
• The Boy in the Bush (1924), edited by Paul Eggert, Cambridge University Press, 1990, ISBN 052130704X
• The Plumed Serpent (1926), edited by L.D. Clark, Cambridge University Press, 1987, ISBN [login to see]
• Lady Chatterley's Lover (1928), edited by Michael Squires, Cambridge University Press, 1993, ISBN [login to see]
• The Escaped Cock (1929) Black Sparrow Press, 1975, ISBN [login to see]
• The Man Who Died (1929) Dodo Press, 2008, ISBN [login to see]
• The Virgin and the Gypsy (1930) Vintage Press, 1992, ISBN [login to see]
Short stories
• The Prussian Officer and Other Stories (1914), edited by John Worthen, Cambridge University Press, 1983, ISBN [login to see]
• England, My England and Other Stories (1922), edited by Bruce Steele, Cambridge University Press, 1990, ISBN [login to see]
• The Fox, The Captain's Doll,The Ladybird (1923), edited by Dieter Mehl, Cambridge University Press, 1992, ISBN [login to see]
• St Mawr and other stories (1925), edited by Brian Finney, Cambridge University Press, 1983, ISBN [login to see]
• The Woman who Rode Away and other stories (1928) edited by Dieter Mehl and Christa Jansohn, Cambridge University Press, 1995, ISBN [login to see]
• The Virgin and the Gipsy and Other Stories (1930), edited by Michael Herbert, Bethan Jones, Lindeth Vasey, Cambridge University Press, 2006, ISBN [login to see] 70
• Love Among the Haystacks and other stories (1930), edited by John Worthen, Cambridge University Press, 1987, ISBN [login to see]
• Collected Stories (1994) - Everyman's Library, a comprehensive one volume edition that prints all 62 of Lawrence's shorter fictions in chronological sequence
Poetry
• Love Poems and others (1913)
• Amores (1916)
• Look! We have come through! (1917)
• New Poems (1918)
• Bay: a book of poems (1919)
• Tortoises (1921)
• Birds, Beasts and Flowers (1923)
• The Collected Poems of D H Lawrence (1928)
• Pansies (1929)
• Nettles (1930)
• Last Poems (1932)
• Fire and other poems (1940)
• The Complete Poems of D H Lawrence (1964), ed. Vivian de Sola Pinto and F. Warren Roberts
Plays
• The Widowing of Mrs Holroyd (1914)
• Touch and Go (1920)
• David (1926)
• The Fight for Barbara (1933)
• A Collier's Friday Night (1934)
• The Married Man (1940)
• The Merry-go-round (1941)
• The Complete Plays of D H Lawrence (1965)
• The Plays, edited by Hans-Wilhelm Schwarze and John Worthen, Cambridge University Press, 1999, ISBN [login to see]
Non-fiction
• Study of Thomas Hardy and other essays (1914), edited by Bruce Steele, Cambridge University Press, 1985, ISBN [login to see] - Literary criticism and metaphysics
• Movements in European History (1921), edited by Philip Crumpton, Cambridge University Press, 1989, ISBN [login to see] - Originally published under the name of Lawrence H. Davison
• Psychoanalysis and the Unconscious and Fantasia of the Unconscious (1921/1922), edited by Bruce Steele, Cambridge University Press, 2004 ISBN [login to see]
• Studies in Classic American Literature (1923), edited by Ezra Greenspan, Lindeth Vasey and John Worthen, Cambridge University Press, 2002, ISBN [login to see]
• Reflections on the Death of a Porcupine and other essays (1925), edited by Michael Herbert, Cambridge University Press, 1988, ISBN 052126622X
• A Propos of Lady Chatterley's Lover(1929) - Lawrence wrote this pamphlet to explain his most notorious novel
• Apocalypse and the writings on Revelation (1931) edited by Mara Kalnins, Cambridge University Press, 1980, ISBN [login to see] - His last book touching on Christian ideology
• Phoenix: the posthumous papers of D H Lawrence (1936)
• Phoenix II: uncollected, unpublished and other prose works by D H Lawrence (1968)
• Introductions and Reviews, edited by N. H. Reeve and John Worthen, Cambridge University Press, 2004, ISBN [login to see]
• Late Essays and Articles, edited by James T. Boulton, Cambridge University Press, 2004, ISBN [login to see]
Travel books
• Twilight in Italy and Other Essays (1916), edited by Paul Eggert, Cambridge University Press, 1994, ISBN [login to see]
• Sea and Sardinia (1921), edited by Mara Kalnins, Cambridge University Press, 1997, ISBN [login to see]
• Mornings in Mexico (1927)
• Sketches of Etruscan Places and other Italian essays (1932), edited by Simonetta de Filippis, Cambridge University Press, 1992, ISBN [login to see]
Works translated by Lawrence
• Lev Isaakovich Shestov All Things are Possible (1920)
• Ivan Alekseyevich Bunin The Gentleman from San Francisco (1922), tr. with S. S. Koteliansky
• Giovanni Verga Maestro-Don Gesualdo (1923)
• Giovanni Verga Little Novels of Sicily (1925)
• Giovanni Verga Cavalleria Rusticana and other stories (1928)
• Antonio Francesco Grazzini The Story of Doctor Manente (1929)
Manuscripts and early drafts of published novels and other works
Scholarly studies of Lawrence's existing manuscripts reveal him to have been a careful craftsman. He often revised his works in a radical way by rewriting them, often over a period of years. Given this, it is interesting to compare these earlier drafts with the final, published versions
• Paul Morel (1911-12), edited by Helen Baron, Cambridge University Press, 2003, ISBN [login to see] - an early manuscript version of Sons and Lovers
• The First Women in Love (1916-17) edited by John Worthen and Lindeth Vasey, Cambridge University Press, 1998, ISBN [login to see]
• Mr Noon (1920?) - Parts I and II, edited by Lindeth Vasey, Cambridge University Press, 1984, ISBN [login to see]
• The Symbolic Meaning: The Uncollected Versions of Studies in Classic American Literature, edited by Armin Arnold, Centaur Press, 1962
• Quetzalcoatl (1925), edited by Louis L Martz, W W Norton Edition, 1998, ISBN 0-8112-1385-4 - Early draft of The Plumed Serpent
• The First and Second Lady Chatterley novels, edited by Dieter Mehl and Christa Jansohn, Cambridge University Press, 1999, ISBN [login to see] . These two books,The First Lady Chatterley and John Thomas and Lady Jane were earlier drafts of Lawrence's last novel
Letters
• The Letters of D. H. Lawrence, Volume I, September 1901 - May 1913, ed. James T. Boulton, Cambridge University Press, 1979, ISBN [login to see] 71
• The Letters of D. H. Lawrence, Volume II, June 1913 - October 1916, ed. George J. Zytaruk and James T. Boulton, Cambridge University Press, 1981, ISBN [login to see] 16
• The Letters of D. H. Lawrence, Volume III, October 1916 - June 1921, ed. James T. Boulton and Andrew Robertson, Cambridge University Press, 1984, ISBN [login to see] 24
• The Letters of D. H. Lawrence, Volume IV, June 1921 - March 1924 , ed. Warren Roberts, James T. Boulton and Elizabeth Mansfield, Cambridge University Press, 1987, ISBN [login to see] 53
• The Letters of D. H. Lawrence, Volume V, March 1924 - March 1927, ed. James T. Boulton and Lindeth Vasey, Cambridge University Press, 1989, ISBN [login to see] 61
• The Letters of D. H. Lawrence, Volume VI, March 1927 - November 1928 , ed. James T. Boulton and Margaret Boulton with Gerald M. Lacy, Cambridge University Press, 1991, ISBN [login to see] 88
• The Letters of D. H. Lawrence, Volume VII, November 1928 - February 1930, ed. Keith Sagar and James T. Boulton, Cambridge University Press, 1993, ISBN [login to see] 96
• The Letters of D. H. Lawrence, with index, Volume VIII, ed. James T. Boulton, Cambridge University Press, 2001, ISBN [login to see] 75
• The Selected Letters of D H Lawrence, Compiled and edited by James T. Boulton, Cambridge University Press, 1997, ISBN [login to see] 51
Works about Lawrence
Bibliographic resources
• Paul Poplawski (1995) The Works of D H Lawrence: a Chronological Checklist (Nottingham, UK: D H Lawrence Society)
• Paul Poplawski (1996) D. H. Lawrence: A Reference Companion (Westport, CT:, and London: Greenwood Press)
• P. Preston (1994) A D H Lawrence Chronology (London: Macmillan)
• W. Roberts and P. Poplawski (2001) A Bibliography of D H Lawrence, 3rd ed. (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press)
• Charles L. Ross and Dennis Jackson, eds. (1995) Editing D H Lawrence: New Versions of a Modern Author (Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press)
• Keith Sagar (1979)D H Lawrence: a Calendar of his Works (Manchester, Manchester University Press)
• Keith Sagar (1982) D H Lawrence Handbook (Manchester, Manchester University Press)
FYI LTC John Shaw 1SG Steven Imerman]PO1 H Gene LawrenceSgt Jim BelanusSGM Bill FrazerMSG Tom EarleySGT Michael HearnPO2 Frederick DunnSP5 Dennis LobergerSGT Randell RoseSSG Jimmy CernichSGT Denny Espinosa SSgt Clare May LTC Ken Connolly MAJ Ken Landgren SSG Robert WebsterCSM Chuck StaffordSFC Bernard WalkoSFC (Join to see) GySgt Gary Cordeiro
Lobo Living Room presents the Inaugural D.H. Lawrence lecture. Mark Doty, National Book Award winner and poet, delvers the keynote lecture. Mark Doty is the author of nine books of poetry, including Deep Lane (April 2015), Fire to Fire: New and Selected Poems, which won the 2008 National Book Award, and My Alexandria, winner of the Los Angeles Times Book Prize, the National Book Critics Circle Award, and the T.S. Eliot Prize in the UK. He is also the author of three memoirs: The New York Times-bestselling Dog Years, Firebird, and Heaven’s Coast, as well as a book about craft and criticism, The Art of Description: World Into Word. Doty has received two NEA fellowships, Guggenheim and Rockefeller Foundation Fellowships, a Lila Wallace/Readers Digest Award, and the Witter Bynner Prize
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WNEex3g3sVE
Images:
1. 1914 David Herbert and Frieda Lawrence with Katherine Mansfield and John Middleton Murry
2. D.H. Lawrence 'There is only one thing that a man really wants to do, all his life and that is, to find his way to his God, his Morning Star'.
3. David Herbert Lawrence 21 years old in 1906
https://www.newworldencyclopedia.org/entry/D._H._Lawrence
David Herbert Lawrence (September 11, 1885 – March 2, 1930) was an important and controversial English writer of the twentieth century, and one of the most important writers in English Modernism. Lawrence was a prolific artist, with his output spanning novels, short stories, poems, plays, essays, travel books, paintings, translations, literary criticism and personal letters. Lawrence is primarily remembered today for pushing the limits of what was acceptable in literary fiction; while other Modernists, like Joyce and Woolf, were content to radicalize the forms of literature, Lawrence was committed to expanding the range of literary subject-matter. In particular, he incorporated Freudian psychoanalysis, frank descriptions of sexuality, and mystical religious themes into his works that were quite shocking to the audiences of his time. Many of Lawrence's works were banned or left unpublished during his life and, like Lord Byron, Lawrence only gained the recognition he deserved in the decades following his death.
Although he is now esteemed as one of the most important figures in the early history of Modernism, Lawrence remains controversial, and deservedly so. His prodigious output is notoriously uneven; and Lawrence, laboring in obscurity, never lived long enough to refine some of his wilder fancies into coherent ideas. Other critics deride Lawrence's explicitness, and it is true that some of his lesser works were written more to shock than to truly enlighten the mind with the brilliance of art. Nonetheless, Lawrence was a genius of the highest order, and his most exemplary poems and novels are among the most influential works of twentieth-century literature. Even so, it can be argued that for all his literary genius, much of what followed from his influence ended up to be detrimental to society.
Life
Early life (1885-1912)
The fourth child of Arthur John Lawrence, an illiterate miner, and Lydia, née Beardsall, a former schoolmistress, David Herbert Richards Lawrence was born and spent his formative years in the coal mining town of Eastwood, Nottinghamshire, United Kingdom. His working class background and the tensions between his mismatched parents provided the raw material for a number of his early works and Lawrence would return to Eastwood, which he was to call "the country of my heart."[1], as a setting for much of his fiction.
The young Lawrence attended Beauvale Board School from 1891 until 1898, becoming the first local pupil to win a County Council scholarship to Nottingham High School in
nearby Nottingham. He left in 1901, working for three months as a junior clerk at Haywood's surgical appliances factory before a severe bout of pneumonia ended this career. While convalescing he often visited Haggs Farm, the home of the Chambers family, beginning a friendship with Jessie Chambers. In the years 1902 to 1906 Lawrence served as a teacher at the British School, Eastwood. He went on to become a full-time student and received a teaching certificate from University College, Nottingham in 1908. During these early years he was working on his first poems, some short stories, and a draft of a novel, Laetitia, that was eventually to become The White Peacock. At the end of 1907 he won a short story competition in the Nottingham Guardian, the first time that he had gained any wider recognition for his literary talents.
In the autumn of 1908 the newly qualified Lawrence left his childhood home for London. While teaching in Davidson Road School, Croydon he continued his writing. Some of the early poetry, submitted by Jessie Chambers, came to the attention of Ford Madox Ford, also known as Ford Madox Hueffer, editor of the influential The English Review. Hueffer commissioned the story Odour of Chrysanthemums. Upon its publication in the Review, Heinemann, a London publisher, was encouraged to ask Lawrence for more work. Lawrence's career as a professional author now began in earnest, although he taught for one year further. Shortly after the final proofs of his first published novel The White Peacock appeared in 1910, Lawrence's mother died. She had been ill with cancer. The young man was devastated and he was to describe the next few months as "his sick year."
During 1911 Lawrence was introduced to Edward Garnett, a publisher's reader, who acted as a mentor, providing further encouragement and becoming a valued friend. Throughout these months the young author revised Paul Morel, the first sketch of what was to become Sons and Lovers. In addition, a teaching colleague, Helen Corke, gave him access to her intimate diaries about an unhappy love affair, which formed the basis of The Trespasser, his second novel. In November 1911 pneumonia struck once again. After recovering his health Lawrence decided to abandon teaching in order to become a full-time author.
Blithe spirits (1912-1914)
In March 1912 the author met the free spirited woman with whom he was to share the rest of his life. She was six years older than her new lover, married and with three young children. Frieda Weekley née von Richthofen was then the wife of Lawrence's former modern languages professor from Nottingham University, Ernest Weekley. She eloped with Lawrence to her parent's home in Metz, a garrison town in Germany near the disputed border with France. Their stay here included Lawrence's first brush with militarism when he was arrested and accused of being a British spy, before being released following an intervention from Frieda's father. After this encounter Lawrence left for a small hamlet to the south of Munich where he was joined by Frieda for their 'honeymoon', later memorialized in the series of love poems entitled Look! We Have Come Through (1917).
From Germany they walked southwards across the Alps to Italy, a journey that was recorded in the first of his brilliant travel books, a collection of linked essays entitled Twilight in Italy and the unfinished novel, Mr Noon. During his stay in Italy, Lawrence completed the final version of Sons and Lovers, a vivid portrait of the realities of working-class provincial life published in 1913. The couple returned to England in 1913 for a short visit. Lawrence now encountered and befriended John Middleton Murry, the critic, and the short story writer from New Zealand, Katherine Mansfield. Lawrence and Frieda soon went back to Italy, staying in a cottage in Fiascherino on the Gulf of Spezia. Here he started writing the first draft of a work of fiction that was to be transformed into two of his finest novels, The Rainbow and Women in Love. Eventually Frieda obtained her divorce. The couple returned to England at the outbreak of World War I and were married on the 13 July, 1914.
The nightmare (1914-1919)
Frieda's German parentage and Lawrence's open contempt for the military meant that they were viewed with suspicion in wartime England and lived in near destitution. The Rainbow (1915) was suppressed after an investigation into its alleged obscenity in 1915. Later, they were even accused of spying and signalling to German submarines off of the coast of Cornwall where they lived at Zennor. During this period he finished a sequel to The Rainbow that many regard as his masterpiece. This radical new work, Women in Love, is a key text of European modernism. In it Lawrence explores the destructive features of contemporary civilization through the evolving relationships of four major characters as they reflect upon the value of the arts, politics, economics, sexual experience, friendship and marriage. This book is a bleak, bitter vision of humanity and proved impossible to publish in wartime conditions. It is now widely recognised as an English novel of great dramatic force and intellectual subtlety.
In late 1917, after constant harassment by the military authorities, Lawrence was forced to leave Cornwall at three days' notice under the terms of the Defence of the Realm Act (DORA). This persecution was later described in an autobiographical chapter of his Australian novel, Kangaroo, published in 1923.
The savage pilgrimage begins (1919-1922)
After the traumatic experience of the war years, Lawrence began what he termed his 'savage pilgrimage',[2]a time of voluntary exile. He escaped from England at the earliest practical opportunity, returning only twice for brief visits. He spent the remainder of his life travelling with Frieda, settling down for only short periods. This wanderlust took him to Italy, Ceylon (now called Sri Lanka), Australia, the United States, Mexico and after returning once more in Italy, southern France.
Lawrence abandoned England in November 1919 and headed south; first to the Abruzzi district in central Italy and then onwards to Capri and the Fontana Vecchia in Taormina, Sicily. From Sicily he made brief excursions to Sardinia, Monte Cassino, Malta, Northern Italy, Austria and Southern Germany. Many of these places appeared in his writings. New novels included The Lost Girl, Aaron's Rod and the fragment entitled Mr Noon (the first part of which was published in the Phoenix anthology of his works, and the entirety in 1984). He experimented with shorter novels or novellas, such as The Captain's Doll, The Fox and The Ladybird. In addition, some of his short stories were issued in the collection England, My England and Other Stories. During these years he produced a number of poems about the natural world in Birds, Beasts and Flowers; these poems are now recognized as one of Lawrence's highest achievements, as well as one of the earliest works of Modernism to take full advantage of the power of free verse. Lawrence's nature poetry, free of the controversies and complexities of his fiction, is perhaps his most enduring contribution to English letters.
Seeking a new world (1922-1925)
In late February 1922 the Lawrences left Europe behind with the intention of migrating to the United States. They sailed in an easterly direction, first to Ceylon and then on to Australia. A short residence in Western Australia was followed by a brief stop in New South Wales, during which Lawrence completed Kangaroo, a novel about local fringe politics that also revealed a lot about his wartime experiences in Cornwall.
Resuming their journey, Frieda and Lawrence finally arrived in the United States in September 1922. Here they considered establishing a utopian community on what was then known as the 160-acre Kiowa Ranch near Taos, New Mexico. By all accounts Lawrence loved this ranch high up in the mountains, the only home that he ever owned. He stayed in New Mexico for two years, taking extended visits into Mexico.
While in the New World, Lawrence rewrote and published his Studies in Classic American Literature, a set of critical essays begun in 1917, and later described by Edmund Wilson as "one of the few first-rate books that have ever been written on the subject." These provocative and original interpretations, with their insights into symbolism, Transcendentalism and the Puritan sensibility, were a significant factor in the revival of the reputation of Herman Melville during the early 1920s. In addition, Lawrence completed a number of new fictional works, including The Boy in the Bush, The Plumed Serpent, St Mawr, The Woman who Rode Away, The Princess. He also found time to produce some more travel writing, such as the collection of linked excursions that became Mornings in Mexico.
A brief voyage to England at the end of 1923 was a failure and he soon returned to Taos, convinced that his life as an author now lay in America. However, in March 1925 he suffered a near fatal attack of malaria and tuberculosis while on a third visit to Mexico. Although he eventually recovered, the diagnosis of his condition obliged him to return once again to Europe. He was dangerously ill and poor health limited the ability to travel for the remainder of his life.
Approaching death (1925-1930)
Lawrence and Frieda set up home in a villa in Northern Italy, living near Florence while he wrote The Virgin and the Gipsy and the various versions of Lady Chatterley's Lover (1928). This book, his last major novel, was initially published in private editions in Florence and Paris, reinforcing his notoriety.
The return to Italy allowed Lawrence to renew some of his old friendships and during these years he was particularly close to Aldous Huxley, a loyal companion who was to edit the first collection of Lawrence's letters after his death. With another friend, the artist Earl Brewster, Lawrence found time to visit a number of local archaeological sites in April 1927. The resulting essays describing these visits to old tombs were written up and collected together as Sketches of Etruscan Places, a beautiful book that contrasts the history of ancient Rome with the brutality of Mussolini's fascist Italy. Lawrence continued to produce fiction, including short stories and The Escaped Cock/The Man Who Died, an unorthodox reworking of the Christian belief of the resurrection that affirms Lawrence's bizarre and complex religious faith.
He continued to write despite his physical frailty. In his last months he authored numerous poems, reviews, essays, and a robust defense of his last novel against those who sought to suppress it. His last significant work was a spirited reflection on the New Testament Book of Revelation, St. John's Apocalypse. After being discharged from a sanatorium he died at the Villa Robermond, Vence, France in 1930 at the age of 44. Frieda returned to live on the ranch in Taos, and later her third husband brought Lawrence's ashes[3] to rest there in a small chapel set amid the mountains of New Mexico.
Posthumous reputation
The obituaries following Lawrence's death were, with the notable exception of E. M. Forster, largely unsympathetic, ill-informed or blatantly hostile. His longtime friend, Catherine Carswell, summed up his life in a letter to the periodical Time and Tide published on the 16th March 1930. In response to his mean-spirited critics she claimed:
In the face of formidable initial disadvantages and life-long delicacy, poverty that lasted for three quarters of his life and hostility that survives his death, he did nothing that he did not really want to do, and all that he most wanted to do he did... He wrote something like three dozen books, of which even the worst page dances with life that could be mistaken for no other man's, while the best are admitted, even by those who hate him, to be unsurpassed.
Works
Realism was the main feature of Lawrence's writings: he passionately believed that it was his duty, as a novelist, to present all the facts of life, and leave no aspect of reality hidden or obscured. As a result, at times he pushed the limits of taste; but he also expanded the boundaries of art. Like Balzac, Lawrence took it upon himself to create all-encompassing art; art that embraced, and investigated all the nuances of human experience.
Among his many works, most famous are his novels Sons and Lovers (1913), The Rainbow (1915), Women in Love (1920), and Lady Chatterley's Lover (1928). All of these major novels take place in and around Eastwood, Lawrence's grim birthplace, an industrial mining town. One of Lawrence's most important contributions to literature may be simply in his choice of setting; he was one of the first major English authors since Dickens to write literature of the working-classes.
Kangaroo, Aaron's Rod and The Plumed Serpent are usually considered together as Lawrence's "leadership novels" that contain a number of Lawrence's ideas on society, philosophy, and religion. As novels, these works are rather difficult and uneven, with Lawrence often sacrificing an interesting narrative for the sake of expressing his own obfuscated ideas. Nevertheless, these lesser-known works offer a captivating glimpse into Lawrence's development as a thinker, and offer the reader a much deeper sense of Lawrence's philosophical and ideological leanings.
Lady Chatterley's Lover is easily Lawrence's most famous novel. Though it was privately published in 1928, it remained unavailable to the general public until its publication by London based Penguin Books in 1960 caused a scandal due to its explicit sex scenes. An obscenity trial followed in Britain, and the novel become a rallying point for the budding youth culture of the 1960s. Penguin Books won the case, the novel was published, and, due to the scandal, became quite popular with rebellious youth.
What is often overlooked among the claims of Lawrence's obscenity is the fact that he was extremely religious. He found the cloistered Christianity of Europe to be confining, wishing to find spiritual rejuvenation through the innocence and simplicity of mystical and tribal religions. In reality, this search for a primeval religious experience was a large part of Lawrence's motivation for undertaking his "savage pilgrimage." His thought was also deeply influenced by contemporary philosophers and psychologists such as Nietzsche, Henri Bergson and others, as well as by the works of Sigmund Freud. Lawrence wished to free himself from the sexual mores of the past so that he could examine the role of sexuality in spiritual and religious experience, and it was quite likely that he might have been surprised about his role in the "sexual revolution" of the 1960s.
Poetry
Although best known for his novels, Lawrence wrote almost eight hundred poems, most of them relatively short. His poetry, over time, has risen in esteem among critics and scholars, and many now argue that Lawrence's poetry is much more consistent in quality than his sometimes manic fictions. His poetry, like that of many other Modernist poets, is highly experimental, and Lawrence was one of the first major English poets to use free verse to great effect.
Lawrence wrote his first poems in 1904 at the age of nineteen, and two of his poems, Dreams Old and Dreams Nascent, were among his earliest published works in The English Review. His early works clearly place him in the school of Georgian poets; a group named after King George V of the United Kingdom, but also connect him to the Romantic poets, most particularly Wordsworth, whose work they were trying to emulate. What typified the entire movement, and Lawrence's poems of the time, were well-worn poetic tropes and deliberately archaic language. Although strained and of lesser quality, these early works show Lawrence's unique voice in its earliest stages. Consider, for example, the following, rather racy, early excerpt;
It was the flank of my wife
I touched with my hand, I clutched with my hand,
rising, new-awakened from the tomb!
It was the flank of my wife
whom I married years ago
at whose side I have lain for over a thousand nights
and all that previous while, she was I, she was I;
I touched her, it was I who touched and I who was touched.
—excerpt New Heaven and Earth
Just as the First World War dramatically changed the work of many of the poets who saw service in the trenches, Lawrence's own work saw a dramatic change during his miserable war years in Cornwall. He had the works of Walt Whitman to thank for showing him the possibilities of free verse. He set forth his manifesto for much of his later verse in the introduction to New Poems:
"We can get rid of the stereotyped movements and the old hackneyed associations of sound or sense. We can break down those artificial conduits and canals through which we do so love to force our utterance. We can break the stiff neck of habit...But we cannot positively prescribe any motion, any rhythm."
Many of his later works lacked all rhyme and meter so that they were little different from short ideas or memos, which could well have been written in prose were it not for their lyric beauty and energy. Lawrence rewrote many of his novels several times to perfect them and similarly he returned to some of his early poems when they were collected in 1928. This was in part to fictionalize them, but also to remove some of the artifice of his first works. As he put it himself: "A young man is afraid of his demon and puts his hand over the demon's mouth sometimes and speaks for him." His best known poems are probably those dealing with nature such as those in Birds Beasts and Flowers and Tortoises. Snake, one of his most frequently anthologized poems, displays some of his most frequent concerns; modern man's distance from nature and subtle hints at religious themes:
A snake came to my water-trough
On a hot, hot day, and I in pyjamas for the heat,
To drink there.
In the deep, strange-scented shade of the great dark carob tree
I came down the steps with my pitcher
And must wait, must stand and wait, for there he was at the trough before me.
He reached down from a fissure in the earth-wall in the gloom
And trailed his yellow-brown slackness soft-bellied down, over the edge of
the stone trough
And rested his throat upon the stone bottom,
And where the water had dripped from the tap, in a small clearness,
He sipped with his straight mouth,
Softly drank through his straight gums, into his slack long body,
Silently.
Someone was before me at my water-trough,
And I, like a second comer, waiting.
He lifted his head from his drinking, as cattle do,
And looked at me vaguely, as drinking cattle do,
And flickered his two-forked tongue from his lips, and mused a moment,
And stooped and drank a little more,
Being earth-brown, earth-golden from the burning bowels of the earth
On the day of Sicilian July, with Etna smoking.
The voice of my education said to me
He must be killed,
For in Sicily the black, black snakes are innocent, the gold are venomous.
—excerpt Snake
Look! We have come through! is another major volume of poetry from the period at the end of the War, revealing another important element common to much of Lawrence's writings—his inclination to lay himself bare, and use his own biographical material for his art. Although Lawrence could be regarded as a writer of love poems, he usually deals in the less romantic aspects of love such as sexual frustration and thwarted desire. Ezra Pound in his Literary Essays complained of Lawrence's interest in his own "disagreeable sensations" but praised him for his "low-life narrative." This is a reference to Lawrence's dialect poems akin to the Scots poems of Robert Burns, in which he reproduced the language and concerns of the people of Nottinghamshire from his youth.
Tha thought tha wanted ter be rid o' me.
'Appen tha did, an' a'.
Tha thought tha wanted ter marry an' se
If ter couldna be master an' th' woman's boss,
Tha'd need a woman different from me,
An' tha knowed it; ay, yet tha comes across
Ter say goodbye! an' a'.
—excerpt The Drained Cup
Pound was the chief proponent of modernist poetry and although Lawrence's works after his Georgian period are clearly in the Modernist tradition, they were often very different to many other modernist writers. Modernist works were often austere, with every word meticulously chosen. Lawrence felt all poems had to be personal sentiments and that spontaneity was vital for any work. He called one collection of poems Pansies partly for the simple ephemeral nature of the verse but also a pun on the French verb panser, meaning to dress or bandage a wound. His wounds still needed soothing for the reception he regularly received in England, as the poems The Noble Englishman and Don't Look at Me were removed from the official edition of Pansies on the grounds of obscenity. Although he lived the life of a world traveler, Lawrence's poetry became controversial primarily because of his frequent criticisms of England's moral climate, as illustrated in the following late quotation:
O the stale old dogs who pretend to guard
the morals of the masses,
how smelly they make the great back-yard
wetting after everyone that passes.
—excerpt The Young and Their Moral Guardians
List of Lawrence's writings
• The White Peacock (1911), edited by Andrew Robertson, Cambridge University Press, 1983, ISBN [login to see]
• The Trespasser (1912), edited by Elizabeth Mansfield, Cambridge University Press,1981, ISBN [login to see]
• Sons and Lovers (1913), edited by Helen Baron and Carl Baron, Cambridge University Press, 1992, ISBN [login to see]
• The Rainbow (1915), edited by Mark Kinkead-Weekes, Cambridge University Press, 1989, ISBN [login to see]
• Women in Love (1920), edited by David Farmer, Lindeth Vasey and John Worthen, Cambridge University Press, 1987, ISBN [login to see]
• The Lost Girl (1920), edited by John Worthen, Cambridge University Press, 1981, ISBN 052122263X
• Aaron's Rod (1922) edited by Mara Kalnins, Cambridge University Press, 1988, ISBN [login to see]
• Kangaroo (1923) edited by Bruce Steele, Cambridge University Press, 1994, ISBN [login to see]
• The Boy in the Bush (1924), edited by Paul Eggert, Cambridge University Press, 1990, ISBN 052130704X
• The Plumed Serpent (1926), edited by L.D. Clark, Cambridge University Press, 1987, ISBN [login to see]
• Lady Chatterley's Lover (1928), edited by Michael Squires, Cambridge University Press, 1993, ISBN [login to see]
• The Escaped Cock (1929) Black Sparrow Press, 1975, ISBN [login to see]
• The Man Who Died (1929) Dodo Press, 2008, ISBN [login to see]
• The Virgin and the Gypsy (1930) Vintage Press, 1992, ISBN [login to see]
Short stories
• The Prussian Officer and Other Stories (1914), edited by John Worthen, Cambridge University Press, 1983, ISBN [login to see]
• England, My England and Other Stories (1922), edited by Bruce Steele, Cambridge University Press, 1990, ISBN [login to see]
• The Fox, The Captain's Doll,The Ladybird (1923), edited by Dieter Mehl, Cambridge University Press, 1992, ISBN [login to see]
• St Mawr and other stories (1925), edited by Brian Finney, Cambridge University Press, 1983, ISBN [login to see]
• The Woman who Rode Away and other stories (1928) edited by Dieter Mehl and Christa Jansohn, Cambridge University Press, 1995, ISBN [login to see]
• The Virgin and the Gipsy and Other Stories (1930), edited by Michael Herbert, Bethan Jones, Lindeth Vasey, Cambridge University Press, 2006, ISBN [login to see] 70
• Love Among the Haystacks and other stories (1930), edited by John Worthen, Cambridge University Press, 1987, ISBN [login to see]
• Collected Stories (1994) - Everyman's Library, a comprehensive one volume edition that prints all 62 of Lawrence's shorter fictions in chronological sequence
Poetry
• Love Poems and others (1913)
• Amores (1916)
• Look! We have come through! (1917)
• New Poems (1918)
• Bay: a book of poems (1919)
• Tortoises (1921)
• Birds, Beasts and Flowers (1923)
• The Collected Poems of D H Lawrence (1928)
• Pansies (1929)
• Nettles (1930)
• Last Poems (1932)
• Fire and other poems (1940)
• The Complete Poems of D H Lawrence (1964), ed. Vivian de Sola Pinto and F. Warren Roberts
Plays
• The Widowing of Mrs Holroyd (1914)
• Touch and Go (1920)
• David (1926)
• The Fight for Barbara (1933)
• A Collier's Friday Night (1934)
• The Married Man (1940)
• The Merry-go-round (1941)
• The Complete Plays of D H Lawrence (1965)
• The Plays, edited by Hans-Wilhelm Schwarze and John Worthen, Cambridge University Press, 1999, ISBN [login to see]
Non-fiction
• Study of Thomas Hardy and other essays (1914), edited by Bruce Steele, Cambridge University Press, 1985, ISBN [login to see] - Literary criticism and metaphysics
• Movements in European History (1921), edited by Philip Crumpton, Cambridge University Press, 1989, ISBN [login to see] - Originally published under the name of Lawrence H. Davison
• Psychoanalysis and the Unconscious and Fantasia of the Unconscious (1921/1922), edited by Bruce Steele, Cambridge University Press, 2004 ISBN [login to see]
• Studies in Classic American Literature (1923), edited by Ezra Greenspan, Lindeth Vasey and John Worthen, Cambridge University Press, 2002, ISBN [login to see]
• Reflections on the Death of a Porcupine and other essays (1925), edited by Michael Herbert, Cambridge University Press, 1988, ISBN 052126622X
• A Propos of Lady Chatterley's Lover(1929) - Lawrence wrote this pamphlet to explain his most notorious novel
• Apocalypse and the writings on Revelation (1931) edited by Mara Kalnins, Cambridge University Press, 1980, ISBN [login to see] - His last book touching on Christian ideology
• Phoenix: the posthumous papers of D H Lawrence (1936)
• Phoenix II: uncollected, unpublished and other prose works by D H Lawrence (1968)
• Introductions and Reviews, edited by N. H. Reeve and John Worthen, Cambridge University Press, 2004, ISBN [login to see]
• Late Essays and Articles, edited by James T. Boulton, Cambridge University Press, 2004, ISBN [login to see]
Travel books
• Twilight in Italy and Other Essays (1916), edited by Paul Eggert, Cambridge University Press, 1994, ISBN [login to see]
• Sea and Sardinia (1921), edited by Mara Kalnins, Cambridge University Press, 1997, ISBN [login to see]
• Mornings in Mexico (1927)
• Sketches of Etruscan Places and other Italian essays (1932), edited by Simonetta de Filippis, Cambridge University Press, 1992, ISBN [login to see]
Works translated by Lawrence
• Lev Isaakovich Shestov All Things are Possible (1920)
• Ivan Alekseyevich Bunin The Gentleman from San Francisco (1922), tr. with S. S. Koteliansky
• Giovanni Verga Maestro-Don Gesualdo (1923)
• Giovanni Verga Little Novels of Sicily (1925)
• Giovanni Verga Cavalleria Rusticana and other stories (1928)
• Antonio Francesco Grazzini The Story of Doctor Manente (1929)
Manuscripts and early drafts of published novels and other works
Scholarly studies of Lawrence's existing manuscripts reveal him to have been a careful craftsman. He often revised his works in a radical way by rewriting them, often over a period of years. Given this, it is interesting to compare these earlier drafts with the final, published versions
• Paul Morel (1911-12), edited by Helen Baron, Cambridge University Press, 2003, ISBN [login to see] - an early manuscript version of Sons and Lovers
• The First Women in Love (1916-17) edited by John Worthen and Lindeth Vasey, Cambridge University Press, 1998, ISBN [login to see]
• Mr Noon (1920?) - Parts I and II, edited by Lindeth Vasey, Cambridge University Press, 1984, ISBN [login to see]
• The Symbolic Meaning: The Uncollected Versions of Studies in Classic American Literature, edited by Armin Arnold, Centaur Press, 1962
• Quetzalcoatl (1925), edited by Louis L Martz, W W Norton Edition, 1998, ISBN 0-8112-1385-4 - Early draft of The Plumed Serpent
• The First and Second Lady Chatterley novels, edited by Dieter Mehl and Christa Jansohn, Cambridge University Press, 1999, ISBN [login to see] . These two books,The First Lady Chatterley and John Thomas and Lady Jane were earlier drafts of Lawrence's last novel
Letters
• The Letters of D. H. Lawrence, Volume I, September 1901 - May 1913, ed. James T. Boulton, Cambridge University Press, 1979, ISBN [login to see] 71
• The Letters of D. H. Lawrence, Volume II, June 1913 - October 1916, ed. George J. Zytaruk and James T. Boulton, Cambridge University Press, 1981, ISBN [login to see] 16
• The Letters of D. H. Lawrence, Volume III, October 1916 - June 1921, ed. James T. Boulton and Andrew Robertson, Cambridge University Press, 1984, ISBN [login to see] 24
• The Letters of D. H. Lawrence, Volume IV, June 1921 - March 1924 , ed. Warren Roberts, James T. Boulton and Elizabeth Mansfield, Cambridge University Press, 1987, ISBN [login to see] 53
• The Letters of D. H. Lawrence, Volume V, March 1924 - March 1927, ed. James T. Boulton and Lindeth Vasey, Cambridge University Press, 1989, ISBN [login to see] 61
• The Letters of D. H. Lawrence, Volume VI, March 1927 - November 1928 , ed. James T. Boulton and Margaret Boulton with Gerald M. Lacy, Cambridge University Press, 1991, ISBN [login to see] 88
• The Letters of D. H. Lawrence, Volume VII, November 1928 - February 1930, ed. Keith Sagar and James T. Boulton, Cambridge University Press, 1993, ISBN [login to see] 96
• The Letters of D. H. Lawrence, with index, Volume VIII, ed. James T. Boulton, Cambridge University Press, 2001, ISBN [login to see] 75
• The Selected Letters of D H Lawrence, Compiled and edited by James T. Boulton, Cambridge University Press, 1997, ISBN [login to see] 51
Works about Lawrence
Bibliographic resources
• Paul Poplawski (1995) The Works of D H Lawrence: a Chronological Checklist (Nottingham, UK: D H Lawrence Society)
• Paul Poplawski (1996) D. H. Lawrence: A Reference Companion (Westport, CT:, and London: Greenwood Press)
• P. Preston (1994) A D H Lawrence Chronology (London: Macmillan)
• W. Roberts and P. Poplawski (2001) A Bibliography of D H Lawrence, 3rd ed. (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press)
• Charles L. Ross and Dennis Jackson, eds. (1995) Editing D H Lawrence: New Versions of a Modern Author (Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press)
• Keith Sagar (1979)D H Lawrence: a Calendar of his Works (Manchester, Manchester University Press)
• Keith Sagar (1982) D H Lawrence Handbook (Manchester, Manchester University Press)
FYI LTC John Shaw 1SG Steven Imerman]PO1 H Gene LawrenceSgt Jim BelanusSGM Bill FrazerMSG Tom EarleySGT Michael HearnPO2 Frederick DunnSP5 Dennis LobergerSGT Randell RoseSSG Jimmy CernichSGT Denny Espinosa SSgt Clare May LTC Ken Connolly MAJ Ken Landgren SSG Robert WebsterCSM Chuck StaffordSFC Bernard WalkoSFC (Join to see) GySgt Gary Cordeiro
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They had a waiting list at the library when it was finally allowed!
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Wasn't he a brother or cousin of the British officer T.E. Lawrence (aka Lawrence of Arabia)?
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LTC Stephen F.
No SPC Terry Page 'In 1879, 18-year-old Sarah Lawrence arrived at the opulent Irish estate of Sir Thomas Chapman to begin work as a governess for his four daughters. The Victorian aristocrat and his domestic servant began an affair, and she secretly gave birth to their illegitimate son in 1885. When the scandal was discovered, Chapman left his wife and moved to Britain with his new love. Although the couple never wed, they adopted the last name Lawrence and pretended to be man and wife. T.E., who was the second of the couple’s five children, only learned the true identities of his parents after his father’s 1919 death.'
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