Thanks - this site is wonderful. I love this part of England. The photos are so beautiful and evoke the feeling I get from some of Lawrence's writings by the seaside.
Hira, this may answer your question. I found this online today.
You can find the rest of the article here: http://literaryculture.suite101.com/..._cornwall_1916When Lawrence, with his wife Freida, moved to Cornwall in1916 he saw it as a first step toward emigrating to America and away from a war he did not support..
Any plans Lawrence and his German wife Freida might have had to move from London to Cornwall, and then to Ireland and eventually America, where they planned to settle, were quickly scuppered by the new British Military Service Act of 1916, which forbad foreign travel by civilians, and put Lawrence in danger of being called-up for military service himself. Lawrence felt trapped.
And it wasn't only the new travel restrictions that made him feel trapped ( to be honest he felt trapped wherever he lived), no, this time it was also because of the suppression, due to the so called 'obscene' content of his recently published novel The Rainbow. As a result Lawrence was getting close to a nervous breakdown. The couple decided to move to Cornwall anyway.
It is quite interesting and revealing.
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Fabulous work! Such romantic and interesting work he did.Loved it! Yep, I'll look him up.
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Glad you found that helpful. I really liked what she said also. It was interesting to me. I liked several of the things she pointed out. This story is really sensual - about the senses and feeling things from a different level...like the taste of the apple, the red berries on the tray, the feel of the sea air, the smell of the roses, and the sense of the man being not as he had once been. I will re-read this story, although I read it twice so far and pick out other references that make this story so alive.I love what Katherine Mansfield says about the story
Yes, exactly. There are many stories of Lawrence's where we don't necessarily like the characters. I think we always feel the need to try and explain them or understand what motivates them. I think, the fact they interact with each other is a vitally important factor. None are as 'islands unto themselves' - they act on impulse and they react also, on impulse or are inclined to react in the moment. It is not a planned reaction. They don't always act logically, this being common behavior of normal human beings. I think Lawrence captures this perfectly. We all have flaws and weaknesses and we don't always act so nice but we all have to realise that we can try and understand why the person reacts as they do.I think I agree with you both Janine and Dark Muse, I really do not like her treatment of her husband but I do agree with what you say Janine about the possible misunderstanding between the two. And perhaps her behaviour is merely instigated by the trauma she has just suffered. But perhaps as you say we are not really required to judge her.
I was reading a commentary book last night on "Tale of Two Cities" and this study quide actually gave me good ideas on how to study any work. First off, it is good to look at the characters, then themes and then symbols. I was thinking how the roses are a fleeting symbol of beauty and might represent the lose of the woman's first love. The sea also is a very changable element in the story.
I love this paragraph; note all the key words I have underlined:
Slowly she went down one path, lingering, like one who has gone back into the past. Suddenly she was touching some heavy crimson roses that were soft as velvet, touching them thoughtfully, without knowing, as a mother sometimes fondles the hand of her child. She leaned slightly forward to catch the scent. Then she wandered on in abstraction. Sometimes a flame-coloured, scentless rose would hold her arrested. She stood gazing at it as if she could not understand it. Again the same softness of intimacy came over her, as she stood before a tumbling heap of pink petals. Then she wondered over the white rose, that was greenish, like ice, in the centre. So, slowly, like a white, pathetic butterfly, she drifted down the path, coming at last to a tiny terrace all full of roses. They seemed to fill the place, a sunny, gay throng. She was shy of them, they were so many and so bright. They seemed to be conversing and laughing. She felt herself in a strange crowd. It exhilarated her, carried her out of herself. She flushed with excitement. The air was pure scent.
I wonder, firstly, about the meaning of the various roses as she encounters them. At the end I ponder this reference to a 'strange crowd'; also the meaning of 'conversing and laughing'. The phrase "It exhilarated her, carried her out of herself" seems to indicate she is not acting as she normally would act.
I particularly love the line refering to the fondling of a child's hand. That is lovely and so heartfelt an image, one that does indeed transport a person back to their past and their own childhood.
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That is fine. Take your time. I am going to try for a third reading myself, now that we brought up some good points. I will notice more on this repeat reading because I will know what to look for. Interesting how that works, isn't it? I will also continue my research and hope to find something more in the letters.I don't really have anything worthwhile to add at the moment. Didn't do a second reading or anything!



"It's so mysterious, the land of tears."
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