You know I thought it was a stretch at first (valley for trenches is a stretch but everything else fits) but you've convinced me Janine. Lawrence is bringing the war to the English countryside.
Yes, I do think you're right.Note how the narrator goes on to say "I sensed I was a prisoner," in that statement last statement. Wow, that is amazing writing; so meaningful. The timing is perfect for such a statement.
I do think the peacock's loss of plumage is significant. Yes you make good points here.And this death/war description continues. I wonder what significance there is to the line “heavily plumed with snow”. It reminds me of a plumed military helmet and also a bird, or the plumes on the peacock’s tail, when he fans it, in his showy manner, to attract a female; although in winter the males lose much of that plumage; which could also be significant in terms of lost masculinity, virility…see how nice I stated that Virgil…
Remember how the wind threw the peacocks off balance..this too could indicate the loss of their control and masculinity, because their tail is diminished...see again how gentily I stated that but I am sure you get my meaning, V. *wink*
Yes, it all fits.The contrast of “white-and-black” in the valley is specifically stated here; interesting. This line especially got to me: “utterly motionless and beyond life, a hollow sarcophagus.” Additionally, this line is pretty incredible: “abstracted as a grove of death”. Even the farms are referred to has "half-buried."
Not strange to me. You all think that lawrence is sympathetic to Maggie, but I don't. Lawrence blames women for the war, or at least for the state of affairs at home during and after the war. Men went off and died in the war but women stayed homed and had incredible power, power they never had before, and they used that power to reshape society. Lawrence didn't like that and thought women were to blame for the shape of modern life. I know it's hard to believe, but that's Lawrence's mindset.Then the narrator thinks of Tible and the “black witch-like little Mrs. Goyte"….he directly links her witch-like aspect to death, which is rather strange; yet that makes sense somehow. I found the last line beautifully stated. Hadn’t the peacock also escaped from the pursuit of Alfred?
What I also found interesting about the snow storm is its depth. I have never heard of England experiencing that kind of snow storm, either in literature or in the news. England for the most part has a very moderate climate for a norhtern Eurpean nation. Does anyone know how likely this kind of snow storm is in England? My thought was that it was very unnatural.



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