Had D.H. Lawrence still been alive when Penguin Books were prosecuted at the Old Bailey, in 1960, for their unexpurgated edition of Lady Chatterley’s Lover, he would have been 75 years old. An unlikely age, perhaps, for a mascot of the sexual revolution, but then he was always out of tune with the times. After the Chatterley trial, Lawrence blazed throughout Sixties like a torch and then spontaneously combusted.
The battle between Lawrence and the rest of the world started in 1915 with the censorship of The Rainbow. He called it his “big and beautiful book”, a biblico-mythico epic about the sexual awakening of three generations of women on the borders of Nottingham-Derbyshire. Beginning in 1840, when men were still in wordless communication with nature, it closed in 1905 when railway lines, mineshafts, and a rash of new houses were corrupting the landscape. The novel was sentenced to death before the bench at Bow Street magistrate’s court, where Dr Crippen had recently been charged with murdering his wife; the 1,011 remaining copies were removed from the offices of Methuen, Lawrence’s publisher, and burned by a hangman outside the Royal Exchange.
The Rainbow, the court concluded, was “a mass of obscenity of thought, idea and action” although the prosecutor had difficulty specifying precisely what it was he had found so obscene. Lady Chatterley’s Lover, written 12 years later when Lawrence had nothing left to lose (he died in 1930) contained words like fuck and balls and arse, but The Rainbow was about as offensive as Thomas Hardy.
The real problem with the novel was the author himself, a working-class upstart with a German wife whose own morals were debatable. Frieda Lawrence, it was rumoured, had left her middle-class husband and three children in order to run away with this sex-obsessed miner’s son. Added to which Frieda’s cousin, Baron von Richthofen, AKA the Red Baron, was the only German fighter pilot whose name was known to every Englishman.
After The Rainbow fiasco, Lawrence began a new life as an outlaw. “One must retire out of the herd and then fire bombs into it” he announced, and as soon as the war was over he exiled himself to Europe and then America, firing bombs all the way.
Like Blake, D.H. Lawrence spoke in prophecies, many of which have been proved — not least his anticipation of his own afterlife. This is dramatised for us in a remarkable scene in The Rainbow’s sequel, Women in Love, published 100 years ago this May. Birkin, Lawrence’s alter-ego, is reading quietly in the drawing room when his girlfriend, Hermione Roddice, approaches him from behind with a lapis lazuli paperweight which she brings down with full force on his head. When she sees he is still breathing, she brings it down again but Birkin takes cover beneath his book. It is curious that Hermione Roddice did not become a cult heroine, because women have been bashing Lawrence on the head ever since.
The most lethal blow was delivered by Kate Millett in Sexual Politics (1970), which was effectively the first list of “Shitty Men” in Literature. Millett argued that Lawrence, Henry Miller and Norman Mailer were guilty of misogyny and while Miller and Mailer rode the storm, Lawrence did not. He became, and remains, one of those writers whose name triggers a mental lockdown; in the Seventies and Eighties, for a woman to reveal that she liked D.H. Lawrence was akin to saying that she liked being roughed-up by her boyfriend. Until Burning Man, I kept my own interest in him quiet.
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SubscribeReading this sort of article makes me feel like I failed in my life as I can not go along with it, get it, as I do not think I ever read all of one of his books, picked them up, know of them, yet D H Lawrence is pretty much one of the required writers if one is to be ‘well read’ and I did not read him.
T E Lawrence I read a good bit though… Anyway I thank Unherd for having this sort of article, I really liked it, although did not really get most of it. More please, it is great to get away from news stuff, and more arts, aesthetics, Literature, because I do rarely now.
I have 250 lineal feet of built in bookcases I just made this year, 1 X 8 clear yellow pine, (42, 10 ft long, 1″ x 8″ boards in all) polyurethaned, actual carpenter built and excellent, and am bringing together my books, and all the ones from my parents house are being shipped here, (which survived the cull), and will have an actual library, many really great books indeed – and even my boyhood science fiction that I loved. I know there is some DH Lawrence in the boxes – And some PG Wodehouse I look forward to, and all kinds of things, going back all my life.
I’ve never been sure about the rest of his oeuvre, but Women in Love is fantastic.
Lawrence was a bit of a plonker in some respects, but I remember reading The Rainbow for A-level and being inspired (like Salvador Dali and Hermann Hesse, he inspires adolescents). That would have been 1977, so he hadn’t been cancelled then. I don’t remember any mention of Kate Millett, or the ideas behind her book, which I suspect reached only a minority. Sadly those ideas are now not just mainstream, but de rigueur. As Fraser B says, many of DH’s strongest characters were women, and that I suspect is part of ‘the problem’. As a ‘s h i t t y’ male, Lawrence cannot have shared in the ‘lived experience’ of women. Millett and all the other single-issue fanatics that plague our lives today admit no possibility of nuance, empathy, creativity, complexity or contradiction. How dull their world must be, and how dull and unpleasant is the world they’re imposing on the rest of us.
I spent a lot of my childhood in the area where Lawrence grew up and would still visit regularly until about 20 years ago. Certain surnames that peopled his life and books, including that of my own relatives (Severn), can still be seen on signboards etc.
I have read pretty much everything he wrote – including Sons And Lovers for A level – along with various biographies and studies etc. I even have a book called D H Lawrence Fifty Years On Film by Louis K Greiff.
I revere him and find it strange that he should have been cancelled by the feminists when he so often wrote from the female point of view and created many strong female characters, celebrating their ‘life force’ or whatever in the process.
In fact, the female characters in his books are invariably stronger than the male characters. For instance, Gudrun Brangwen (or is it the other sister?) is surely the strongest character in Women In Love and defeats the man who walks off into the Alpine snow to his death.
It is indeed Gudrun who drives Gerald Crich to his suicide. Her sister Ursula ends up hitched to Rupert Birkin.
Great article, thank you Frances Wilson.
I have always liked D H Lawrence, never read Kate Millet and never will.
The Rainbow and Sons and Lovers, two of my favourite books when I was younger. Sometimes I find DH’s urgings and surgings a bit much but that’s alright, it was brave writing.
Snake has to be one of the greatest poems ever written.
poetryfoundation.org/poems/148471/snake-5bec57d7bfa17
(Not sure how to create a link I’m afraid, best I can do)
Great to read my favourite opening line again. “Sea and Sardinia” is both one of his most neglected works and the best writing on the Mediterranean that you will ever see.
Yes we live in an era which seems incapable of appreciating the great Lawrence yet which needs to find out more about him. I think the writer here gets it right that he is the last of the great Romantics: he shares much with Blake. In the sixties opinions were shaped by F. R. Leavis’ wonderful book on him bringing out the greatness of Women in Love and The Rainbow. Leavis helped us see why these novels were so much greater than the rather sadly limited Lady Chatterley which is the only novel most have heard about because of the notorious trial. Yes we badly need to start re-reading him.
A friend of mine had a number of the books written by Ernest Weekley, first husband of Frieda. He loved those books which were on the origin of names, word etymology etc;
He couldn’t understand how she could have left a genuine scholar for a writer of ‘silly nonsense’ as he called Lawrence.
I visited San Christobel recently..anyone interested?