
Originally Posted by
amalia1985
I will tempt to link the serpent question-which has attracted my attention, and has greatly confused me, as well- with the following beautiful description of Lawrence, which depicts the influence of Nature, once again.
[QUOTE:
“And though the Atlantic was grey as lava, she did come at last into the sun. Even she had a house above the pluest if seas, with a vast garden, or vineyard, all vines and olives steeply, terrace after terrace, to the strip of coast- plain; and the garden full of secret places, deep groves of lemon far down in the cleft of the earth, and hidden, pure green reservoirs of water; then a spring issuing out of a little cavern, where the old Sicules had drunk before the Greeks came; and a grey goat bloating, stabled in a ancient tomb, with all the niches empty. There was the scent of mimosa and beyond the snow of the volcano” QUOTE]
I think that this is a description of an Eden- like place, and the garden has a certain connotation, as a symbol of the unknown, if you like, something mysterious. I would venture to say that it can be another image for the temptation of escaping the present life.
The repetition of “lava”, and “volcano”, is significant too, in my opinion. I have read that volcano often stands as a symbol for the hidden female nature, at least, in poetry, especially in poems by Elizabeth Bishop and Louise Bogan, but there is a possibility that this symbolism is eligible in our story, as well. You know, just as an idea.