The creative, spontaneous soul sends forth its promptings of desire and aspiration in us. These promptings are our true fate, which is our business to fulfill. A fate dictated from outside, from theory or from circumstance, is a false fate.
—from his foreword to
Women in Love
(1920)
Virginia Woolf
Perhaps the verdicts of critics would read less preposterously and their opinions would carry greater weight if, in the first place, they bound themselves to declare the standard which they had in mind, and, in the second, confessed the course, bound, in the case of a book read for the first time, to be erratic, by which they reached their final decision. Our standard for Mr. Lawrence, then, is a high one. Taking into account the fact, which is so constantly forgotten, that never in the course of the world will there be a second Meredith or a second Hardy, for the sufficient reason that there have already been a Meredith and a Hardy, why, we sometimes asked, should there not be a D. H. Lawrence? By that we meant that we might have to allow him the praise, than which there is none higher, of being himself an original; for such work as came our way was disquieting, as the original work of a contemporary writer always is.
—from the
Times Literary Supplement
(December 2, 1920)
T. S. Eliot
One writer, and indeed, in my opinion, the most interesting novelist in England—who has apparently been somewhat affected by Dostoevsky—is Mr. D. H. Lawrence. Mr. Lawrence has progressed—by fits and starts, it is true; for he has perhaps done nothing as good as a whole as
Sons and Lovers.
—from
The Dia
l (September 1922)
Questions
1. Galsworthy compares Lawrence to Tolstoy. Is it the breadth of
Sons and Lovers
alone that warrants immediate comparison to Tolstoy, or is there a deeper connection between the two writers? How do the two authors’ treatments of morality differ? Does Lawrence more closely resemble Dostoevsky, as T. S. Eliot suggests?
2. Does Paul Morel have an Oedipus complex?
3. To what do you attribute the conflict between Mr. and Mrs. Morel? There is, of course, the difference in class and education. Is that the whole of it? Paul sides with Mrs. Morel, as the young Lawrence sided with his mother. The older Lawrence sided with his father, on whom Mr. Morel is modeled. Whose side are you on?
4. Lawrence’s natural settings are often symbolic. They color, reflect, or suggest the meaning of what happens in them. Analyze one instance.
5. In a preface to his novel
Women in Love,
D. H. Lawrence wrote, “In point of style, fault is often found with continual, slightly modified repetition. The only answer is that it is natural to the author; and that every natural crisis in emotion or passion or understanding comes from this pulsing, frictional to-and-fro which works up to culmination.” Do you agree that “every natural crisis in emotion or passion or understanding” comes from this kind of movement? Can you find a passage in the novel that bears out Lawrence’s claim?
For Further Reading
Biography
Delavenay, Emile.
D. H. Lawrence: The Man and His Work, The Formative Years: 1885-1919.
London: Heinemann, 1972. An analysis of Lawrence’s early life viewed through his writing; a good synthesis of biographical material with literary discussion.
Murry, John Middleton.
Son of Woman: The Story of D. H. Lawrence.
London and Toronto: Jonathan Cape, 1931. Considered to be one of the best books on Lawrence ever published.
Nehls, Edward, ed.
D. H. Lawrence: A Composite Biography.
Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1957-1959. An anthology of recollections arranged chronologically in three volumes to create a complete and vivid picture of Lawrence’s life.
Sagar, Keith.
The Life of D. H.
Lawrence. London: Eyre Methuen, 1980. An illustrated biography.
Worthen, John.
D. H. Lawrence: The Early Years, 1885-1912.
Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press, 1991. The definitive account of Lawrence’s youth.
Memoir and Personal Recollection
Lawrence, Frieda.
The Memoirs and Correspondence.
Edited by E. W. Tedlock. London: Heinemann, 1961. Fragments of writing from Lawrence’s wife, stitched together to create an intimate portrait of her personality and her life with Lawrence.
Leavis, F. R. D.
H. Lawrence, Novelist.
New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1956. A review of Lawrence and his work by his friend and admirer, written for the express purpose of securing Lawrence’s place in “The Great Tradition” of English literature.
Miller, Henry.
The World of Lawrence: A Passionate Appreciation.
Edited with an introduction and notes by Evelyn J. Hinz and John J. Teunissen. Santa Barbara, CA: Capra Press, 1980. An unabashedly biased discussion of Lawrence’s personality and work in entertaining, passionate prose.
Criticism
Black, Michael.
D. H. Lawrence, The Early Fiction: A Commentary.
Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press, 1986. Criticism on Lawrence’s short stories and his first three novels, as well as an informative essay on the different critical approaches to Lawrence and his writing.
Bloom, Harold, ed.
Modern Critical Views: D. H. Lawrence
. New York: Chelsea House Publishers, 1986. A review of critical approaches to Lawrence’s work with articles from twenty contributors, including Joyce Carol Oates and F. R. Leavis.
Siegel, Carol.
Lawrence among the Women: Weaving Boundaries in Women’s Literary Traditions
. Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia, 1991. A critical analysis of Lawrence’s view of women and his relationship to the modern feminist movement.
Works Cited in the Introduction
Boulton, James T., ed.
The Letters of D. H. Lawrence
. Vol. 1, September 1901-May 1913. Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press, 1979. More than 500 letters provide rich insight into Lawrence’s youth, early loves, and first successes.
Chambers, Jessie.
D. H. Lawrence: A Personal Record.
1935. Reprint: New York: Barnes and Noble, 1965. A memoir about Lawrence’s early years, covering his relationship with his mother, his first three novels, and his friendship with the author.
Hoffman, Frederick J., and Harry T. Moore.
The Achievement of D. H. Lawrence.
Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1953. A collection of responses to D. H. Lawrence written by his contemporaries ; both entertaining and informative.
a
Stuart king of England, 1660-1685.
c
Rudimentary bathrooms in which ashes were used to cover excrement.
e
Stubble field for cattle.
f
Allowance; in this case, free drinks in exchange for working at the bar.
j
Covered with ashes or small coals to keep it slowly burning through the night.
k
Established family in the shire.
l
Frolicking or leaping about.
n
Mocking me, undermining my jokes.
r
Vow to stop drinking alcohol.
s
Spiritless coward or weakling.
u
Coal wall on which a team of miners worked.
x
Tub for collecting rainwater.
z
Popular, sentimental song of the day.
ad
Person who distributed unfinished stockings to female workers to stitch the back seam at home for extra money.
ae
Bowlful; a reference to copper bowls used for laundry.
af
Small, horse-drawn cart.
ah
Reheat and chop leftover meat for a meal.
ai
A colloquialism tacked on to the end of phrases or sentences; it has no literal meaning.
ak
Lift used to transport coal and coal miners between the pit and the surface.
au
Game like horseshoes played by tossing a ring on or close to a pin.
ay
Scottish, from the Highlands of Britain.
az
Mother (Latin, but common in British usage).
ba
“Apostle”; here used to refer to Paul as the Apostle Paul.
bc
Game like hide-and-seek.
bg
Anvil shaped like a goose’s neck.
bm
Dish made by boiling wheat in milk and seasoning with cinnamon and sugar.
bn
Thicket or small grove that is periodically cut back.
bo
Beat, as in “you beat me here.”
bp
Condescendingly (French).
br
Hat ornamentation made of fur or foxtail.
bt
Colloquialism tacked on to the end of sentences and phrases; it has no literal meaning.
bw
Game in which children sing around a circle.
bx
Outer slip like an apron.
by
Children’s song that accompanies a ring game.
ce
Living by money received from the local aid societies, or clubs.
cf
Fashionable suit worn with a loose-fitting jacket and waist belt.
cg
The former is an art shop, the latter a drug store selling herbal remedies.
ch
Watercolor brush made from the soft fur of the sable.
ci
The equivalent, in today’s terms, of “Get out of town!”
cj
Popular narcotic and painkiller made from morphia, chloroform, Indian hemp, and prussic acid.
cm
Variety of domestic fowl, the cocks of which are known to be feisty fighters.
cn
Popular song about a supposed infidelity.
co
Humorous pronunciation of au revoir, “goodbye” (French).
cp
In quiet voices; from sotto, “under,” and voce, “voice” (Latin).
ct
Person with no practical ability.
cw
Candied chestnuts (French).
cy
Field left uncultivated for a year or more to help replenish the soil for future farming.
cz
“The last of a dying breed” (French).
db
To embrace amorously; the word has a sexual connotation.
dc
Beaten to the punch by someone who got there first (Nottinghamshire dialect).