Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Introduction
- Part 1 Texts
- 1 Ideas, histories, generations and beliefs: the early novels to Sons and Lovers
- 2 Narrating sexuality: The Rainbow
- 3 Sex and the nation: ‘The Prussian Officer’ and Women in Love
- 4 Decolonising imagination: Lawrence in the 1920s
- 5 Work and selfhood in Lady Chatterley’s Lover
- 6 Lawrence’s tales
- 7 Lawrence’s poetry
- 8 Lawrence as dramatist
- Part 2 Contexts and critical issues
- Guide to further reading
- Index
7 - Lawrence’s poetry
from Part 1 - Texts
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 May 2006
- Frontmatter
- Introduction
- Part 1 Texts
- 1 Ideas, histories, generations and beliefs: the early novels to Sons and Lovers
- 2 Narrating sexuality: The Rainbow
- 3 Sex and the nation: ‘The Prussian Officer’ and Women in Love
- 4 Decolonising imagination: Lawrence in the 1920s
- 5 Work and selfhood in Lady Chatterley’s Lover
- 6 Lawrence’s tales
- 7 Lawrence’s poetry
- 8 Lawrence as dramatist
- Part 2 Contexts and critical issues
- Guide to further reading
- Index
Summary
Although he is remembered and celebrated today primarily as a novelist and short-story writer, Lawrence first saw publication as a poet, wrote poetry throughout most of his life, and granted a privileged status to poetic language and vision: 'The essential quality of poetry', he declared in a 1928 essay, 'is that it makes a new effort of attention, and “discovers” a new world within the known world.' That he was far too prolific and undiscriminating a poet, few readers would dispute: the posthumously published Complete Poems, at more than 1,000 pages long, functions better as a doorstop than as light bedtime reading. That a great many of his poems are didactic, prosy, irrational, undisciplined, sentimental, obscene, ranting, whiny or otherwise virtually unreadable, critics have agreed at least since 1919, when the rawly emotional marriage poems of Look! We Have Come Through! prompted Lawrence's sometime friend Bertrand Russell to snort, 'They may have come through, but I don't see why I should look.' Lawrence's less fortunate poetic efforts do occasionally have value, if not as aesthetic masterpieces, then at least as historical documents of artistic struggle. His most memorable poems, however, stand alongside the finest poetic efforts of the twentieth century and are still widely anthologised and admired by readers today.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Cambridge Companion to D. H. Lawrence , pp. 119 - 136Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2001
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