Hi Quark, I read your post a day or so ago. Been trying to get back to it. So here I am at last!
I just got to your favorite scene in the woods with Clara and Paul. It seems more in implied when they go to tea as to what took place there in that ravine or whatever that odd space was - all muddy and some sort of a ledge in the tree trucks. This part I was a bit foggy about, but it is interesting to note, that one surmises what took place (now I am being very serious about this) from the way Paul's mood is so different afterwards - he is all aglow and playful with Clara, as he cleans her boots off - so that one knows his sexual anxiety has now been relieved. Writers today should take the que and not have to be so explicit in their descriptions - sometimes they really get annoying and crude. Of course, I don't know what is to follow this scene (?) and also I know that in "Lady Chatterly's Lover" Lawrence is much more explicitly expressive of this sexual union between woman and man. Of course, Quark, I realise you have not read it yet....ordering it online right now, are you? haha![]()
So what you wrote above does make perfect sense to me. He has his little romps with Clara, that don't ultimately satisfy his greater self, and he is drawn back to Miriam. I had forgotten that part. I am just past the part, when he had broken off with her - I have to tell you that at the end of that chapter and that scene between them - I felt sad and even shed a small tear when the last line read in that chapter about Miriam remaining so alone and waiting. Of course, now I have gone beyond in the text and I am to the lighter/casual affair between Paul and Clara - those 'lascivious' parts.I can't wait to resume my reading tonight.
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I have a few questions about the breakup passages, and interaction/conversation between Miriam and Paul, and their reactions to each other. Do you think that Miriam is truly telling the truth to Paul, when she says they never had a good day or a truly loving day; not her exact words but something like that? Then it totally devasts Paul to think that what he thought to be never actually existed between them.
I could see this two ways. The woman is feeling totally betrayed and therefore, turns the whole thing around, as a kind of 'emotional protection' for herself; also a way of being 'one up' on Paul. We woman tend to lash out or fight back at these times. I can see this breakup from another perspective, as well. Perhaps it is true and she is finally being totally honest with herself and with Paul. I don't doubt she does love him in a special way, and he her, as well, but I find this as confusing as a real life breakup and I feel like I can relate to this sort of thing, having lived through one that seemed similar in the dymanics of the conversation; one aspect being that it might be something that one knows is coming and cannot control and when the 'axe does finally fall' it seems 'shocking' and sudden, inspite of prior premonitions or feelings. This I think is what Miriam is experiencing at that point; she did know and believe deep, deep down, but failed to realise fully or 'consciously'; therefore, it all comes as a huge hurtful shock to her, when it does come. Even Paul questions later, when he has just told his mother, if he has seriously done the right thing.
This interaction between Miriam and Paul is much more fascinating to me, than it was on my first reading. I can see so much more in these few pages, that goes on between them. It seems so utterly true and real.
In that last quote of yours I agree with your last statement entirely - it was not just sexual incompatibility that caused the ultimate breakup of Miriam and Paul. They had a whole string of problems, that could not be worked out, if you think about it. They truly wanted different things in their future lives.
I agree with all of this, Q, and I am especially pleased that the rugged manly figure that you are, you can still tap into your sensitive side and see how very beautiful and meaningful these passages are. And yes, not intended for sentimentality but for deeper meaning and reflections of the conflicts, themes, etc in the novel. It is all there for a purpose - Lawrence would not think in any other vain I am sure. Even that muddy decent into the woods by the river - I felt that red mud took on significance, didn't you. And the smashing of the vermillion red flowers certainly were suggestive and significant and representative of deeper meanings - perhaps Lawrence's 'blood philosophy'; I would certainly think it.The second half is by far my favorite part. The first half is charming in its own way. I like the part where Mr. Morel storms out of the house but doesn't even make it to mailbox before he turns around. The problem with the first part has something to do with it's style. It reads like a work of dry realism, and Lawrence meets realism with only moderate success. He's far better with the more emotionally charged language he uses in the second half of the novel. The scene that Janine refers to is a perfect example. Now, being male, some people have a hard time believing that I, rugged manly figure that I am, would like emotional renderings of landscapes; but, actually, I do--that is, if they are well done. And, it's not just that the writing is moving or beautiful. It has more to do with the fact that it fits and improves the story. The writing isn't just meant to be sentimental; it's meant to express the characterization, conflict, and themes that guide the story. The second half does this far better than the first. Also, the characters are better. The portrait of Miriam in this story is very good.
Q, Glad you liked it and consider it a possibility. I just got thinking of how influence woman can be by their mothers advice just as much as men, maybe even more so. Also sexual morality issues are at play here - nice girl verses bad girl. It would have been greatly frowned on for a young girl to say alone in the house with her boyfriend as Miriam and Paul did that night, or weekend, whatever. So I can't blame Miriam for being prudish. I don't think truly the woman is - she is just totally unexperienced and shy as well and she does not have the faintest idea of how to break out of this and her ingrained standards nor does she know if it is truly right to do so. She was definitely confused about her love to Paul and her place within that love.This is pretty good Janine. I hadn't thought about Miriam's mother's role in the Paul-Miriam relationship. I think your quotes are quite revealing. I had always thought that Miriam's prudishness was a result of her pretentiousness. I thought that she scorned sex as something low, and Miriam hates everything low because of her defensiveness about her social situation: a rural woman who is picked on by some of her family. I had never thought of the mother as such an influence, but it would make sense. If this is true, then you're right Paul and Miriam's sexual frustrations can be pinned on the older generation and possibly the greater society. Good thought, Janine
Q, And yes - definitely the second half is the best half of the book but the first half also has some fine moments - like when the older brother dies.



I can't wait to resume my reading tonight.
"It's so mysterious, the land of tears."
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so I had to give in to sleep.
Himanolia, I do so agree but still it seems strange. Another thing is that so often I noticed that Paul kept questioning Clara about if she made the husband the way he was. Considering Paul's own family dynamics this struck me as curious - did Paul's mother make his father the way he was?
came to be. Paul at this point is only a few steps away from Alan Bates land.

