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Originally Posted by
Sapphire
I have read the word "common" in quite a lot of books, and the word in itself does not reek of socialism. Well, except for the fact that it is "common propriety". :crazy: :lol: What I mean to say is this: the word was around before socialism was :nod:
Thank you for the insight in Lawrence's view on socialism/capitalism. I myself thought he migth be in favour of socialism, but with his amorism towards the primitive world I see how he did not really fall for it. I wonder what they had back in those days though... Survival of the fittest? They did stick in communities to stay strong against the primitive land around them, like Mr. Marshall has a small community there in Hampshire. I can see how you can read that in the word "common" :nod:
I guess that in the end everybody has to live somewhere, and the garden has to end at either a road, a brook or a common. In this case, it ends in a brook that has a common on its other edge.
Yes, I guess you're right. It's at the edge of their property. Perhaps it's only significance is that it's wild land rather than cultivated.
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Yes, there are parts where he submits. But never fully, and that's the whole problem of it. For if he had taken a job, who knows how things whould have ended? Well, knowing Lawrence probably with an equally miserable Egbert, but it is a submission which he does not do. He IS a stubborn guy ;) Though Lawrence throws it all on breeding :p
I think it's a process toward submission for Egbert. And yes Lawrence was stubborn and never submitted. :D
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That's a literary way to put it - ramifications is a wonderful word.
Thanks. :)
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Yes - the North/South differences in England. They are really pointed out in this story, or at least how Lawrence looked at them. I do think winifred is born in the South though - she has got brown eyes. It is George Marshall who is said to be from the North - we do not know where his wife is from and where the children were born. He might have waited to mary untill he had some money, he seems that kind of man. And with Winifred having brown eyes, I think genetically this means his wife should have brown eyes too. But maybe they did not know this back then? Or I am mistaken - very possible, for I was never interested that much in biology in High School. Wiki says that "any combination can occur". So there goes my theory :lol:
http://i214.photobucket.com/albums/c...wikismiley.gif
I don't think Lawrence was thinking genetics. I think the nordic blue eyes suggest a certain idealism while the brown symbolize common and practical.
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I think you might be right there. I just thought it a bit queer, as the Saxons were "raided" by the Normans - 1066 is a year even we learned in high school (and we live at the other side of the Channel :p). To put those two in the same pot is a bit awkward... but then again they were both people from the (far) past, and Lawrence tries to make clear that it is an old, old place.
As for the names - I'll get back to that. I did some name-researching :p I'll point it out at the text where people indeed get a name - notice how Egbert is a "he" until the 6th paragraph
Yes, but the Normans ultimately won and established the South as more continental as opposed to the North as more nordic/saxon.
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Agreed. I am still not sure whether the flowers are just flowers that grow in South England, or whether there is more behind it. Egbert does like his mulleins - a torchlike plant (flame + erect).
Go ahead Janine, you are free to roll your eyes at this
http://i214.photobucket.com/albums/c...ey/angel-1.gif :D
:lol: Yes, flame comes up a few times. And the flowers are symbolic as the ideal being as in other Lawrence stories.
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Still “his”, Egbert’s name is not named yet. And though we learn here that he’s disillusioned, we do not exactly know what in. In his children? In his own capabilities? In the garden?
“What was there to do but submit!” :rolleyes: I wish I knew the English translation of the Dutch word “lapswans” :biggrinjester:
Where does the story start? Is it at the beginning of the marriagfe or is it mid way and then Lawrence backtracks to the early marriage? That's sort of ambigous. I think that "what to do but submit" is coming from later in the time sequence of the story. He's already disillusioned here and ready to submit.
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This paragraph is here for one reason and one reason only: to make it very clear that the location is a savage, primitive one! And though I am bound to say this is dangerous, the writer tells us there’s peace in the savageness – while in continuation he tells about the shaggy gorse, marsh and snake-infested places. I connect “peace” with safety, but that is not what these things imply :nonod:
Agreed. The snakes are there but there is peace with the savage beasts, edenic.
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Note also that “there was a vividness of flamy vegetation, of fierce seclusion amid the savage peace”. I take it the flamy vegetation indicate the flowers Egbert is so determined to have his garden covered with ;) So the garden lies in “fierce seclusion” amidst these primitive surroundings – this paragraph seems to say it is NOT a part of it.
Flamy… Now what were flames a symbol of in Lawrence-land? :blush: I really should know this! I think it stands for prosperity in the sexual life. Something like that. :flare: :p
Yes, you're right in your blushing. That's what Lawrence is suggesting. And we get more of it later which I'm sure will be pointed out.
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We go back in time (still no name). The description of the place is more detailed now, with the names of the flowers so we can really get a picture of a flamy garden in our mind :D We learn it is an old place, it has been there for a thousand years. So it has been amidst these primitive commons (older) for quite a while – even before the Normans came :) But not before the Saxons came… So the garden might be created by Saxons.
“And yet he had re-created it”. This is a very important sentence in my eyes: it shows how Egbert is aware that he has changed something very, very old. He has mendled in something enduring. The sentence does NOT read “He had tried to re-create it” – no, he has done it, he has succeeded!
I am a bit confused about the word “re-created” though. For it seams to imply that he has created something which was already created once. So he has not made something new. Until now, I saw the flamy garden as something created by Egbert – the flames/flowers that is, not the garden. But if he re-created it, what was his example? Which other flamy garden did he copy?
Not sure what to make of "re-create" either. Perhaps Janine can help here.
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Or do I misunderstand the word “re-create”, and does it simply indicate that he changed the (enduring) garden to his wishes?
It does seem to have some special significance. I'm not sure either.
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Again the savageness versus the world of today. The cottage is old and forgotten, on the edge of the common – so almost swallowed into the common, into the savageness. Closer to the old days than the new. But the arrival of Egbert and his bride might make this different (“till”), for he “had come to fill it with flowers”.
Is there anybody else here who was reminded of Shakespeare when reading “hamlets”? I had to grab a dictionary to figure out what it means – funny how one ordinary word can be so connected to a character. :rofl: “Yeomen” did not ring a bell in any way, though apparently that word is mentioned in Hamlet (Act5, Scene 2, line 36) :p Here is the explanation from The Wordsworth Dictionary of Phrase & Fable:
No I don't think it refers to the Shakespeare play. It means small village and very rural. It's a common English word you may not have come across yet.
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ham·let (ham′lit)
noun
a very small village
Origin: ME hamelet < OFr (Anglo-Fr hamelete), dim. of hamel (Fr hameau), dim. of LowG hamm, enclosed area, akin to OE: for IE base see hem
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Janine mentioned Egbert:
Good pick up Janine. I hadn't realized it.
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Marshall
This really fits Mr. Marshall: poor in the North (mabye even a servant), wealthy and influenceful in the South (in control).
I also noted something else, probably just a coincidence but it stuck in my head. :nod: Marshall = Marsh + all. So marshes all around ;)
Oh yes, marsh. The setting is in a marshy place, isn't it?
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Egbert
As Virgil said it is of Old English origin, and some googling learned me that it means as much as "bright sword" (beorht ecg). So there is brightness (flame) in his name, and an erect weapon :angel:
:lol: Yep! I'm sure Lawrence liked that.
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Apparently the name has been rarely used after the Norman conquest, but revived in the 19th century. So to me, this is rather a reference to the Saxons than the Vikings.
The meaning of the name must be important, as in the first version of the story, Egbert was called Evelyn. The origin of that name is a bit obscure, but from what I gather one of its meanings refers to Eve - not Adam, but Eve; the woman who was seduced by the snake and in turn seduced Adam. So the lead character had some feminine features in the early version! It is a commenly accepted male name though ;)
Egbert is a very odd name to give a 20th century character. Surely Lawrence is picking it for a purpose. Thank God he changed his mind from Evelyn. :sick:
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George
As George is Catholic, I searched for the meaning of St. George
Is his first name George? I have Godfrey in my edition:
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Godfrey Marshall, her father, was at first perfectly pleased with the
ménage down at Crockham Cottage. He thought Egbert was wonderful, the
many things he accomplished, and he was gratified by the glow of physical
passion between the two young people.
May I ask what you guys think is the significance of the Roman Catholicism? It's very prominant in the story and it was not that common in England. Mostly Anglican protestants there and Lawrence grew up protestant. I don't know what to make of it but I do think it has significance, especially since Christian motifs run through the story. If this story was written in 1915, that would be before he went to live in Italy and encountered Catholics there. He came to think highly of Catholicism (not for any theological reasons but because i think he liked the mediterranian way of life) but that would be after he wrote this story. And i don't think he portrays the Catholicism in a positive way. So I'm not sure what he's saying with it.