Based on those three signs, I just can’t get a line on what’s supposed to be going on here.
And what, exactly, is Piper Laurie protesting?
Based on those three signs, I just can’t get a line on what’s supposed to be going on here.
And what, exactly, is Piper Laurie protesting?
“It” begins at the 4 minute mark, but it’s worth it to watch the rest, for context, if you are not aware.
I’ve been a fan of Sheryl Lee Ralph ever since the Dreamgirls Broadway soundtrack album swept my college theatre department like a wildfire. We could not get past it. Nor did we want to.
But this … this speech is beyond anything I would even hope or try to describe. This is why she is a major force. There it is. It is the Divine speaking through her, and she knows it. She shares it. She connects us to it, through her.
Jean-Luc Godard and Anna Karina
I wanted to point the way towards a couple of really good tributes written by (as it happens) good friends of mine.
Dan Callahan over at Ebert: Image is Happiness: Jean-Luc Godard (1930-2022).
Godard was alive in but entrapped by a sea of quotations and points of comparison, and it could be said that he was the James Joyce of modernist cinema; in his middle period he tried to be the Bertolt Brecht of the cinema, too, but that didn’t really take, and after that he was a very gnarly purveyor of erudite futility. His mind was full of intellectual bric-a-brac, a sensitive young loner’s defense system, and so he was protected by all his references but also walled in.
Glenn Kenny over on Decider: Jean-Luc Godard Is Dead: The Cinema’s Highest Modernist Was 91
I don’t think any filmmaker has been called “pretentious” more than Godard. In any event, his talky, elliptical, sometimes deliberately boring films of post-’68, made in collaboration with Jean Pierre Gorin and later his life partner Anne Marie Mieville, motivated critics to break out the “p” word almost reflexively. Pop art Godard was replaced by (provisional) Maoist Godard. A Godard who also worked a great deal in television, even doing commercials (he contained multitudes). Richard Brody’s monumental 2008 biography of the man, Everything Is Cinema: The Working Life of Jean-Luc Godard, persuasively argues that this period was as artistically significant as any other in Godard’s career. Godard not being any “fun” did not, after all, equal Godard not being great.
And finally, Jordan Hoffman for Vanity Fair.
People who write well – and thoughtfully – people who know shit help me and others to process things.
I process loss slowly. This is a detriment to someone who writes about what is going on. And of course by “slowly” I mean it takes me a couple of days. Jean-Luc Godard changed the world. Breathless had the same impact on movies as the Beatles getting off the plane on their first trip to America had on … everything. Nothing would ever be quite the same again.
Just this past December, I decided to watch Godard’s filmography in chronological order, starting with his shorts (many of which are on YouTube). I wrote about this experience in my December 2021 viewing diary. Of course I’ve seen all of his major films, in some cases many many times. His politics were atrocious – Mao? Really? – and while I didn’t “engage” with his films on a political level – in fact I found it naive and irritating – I appreciated the mere presence of politics in love stories or domestic dramas. Politics are in the air we breathe. American films totally ignore this, so much so it can be extremely alienating the first time you watch a Godard films. Why are young runaway lovers talking about the Chinese Cultural Revolution and reading out loud to each other? Well, you know, that’s what young people do. Or … they take it too far. Uhm …
One of my first thoughts when I heard the news was a deep sense of gratitude? not the right word, really … more like thankfulness – thankfulness directed towards him, and his spirit, or where he is right now, thankfulness for Breathless. Contempt. Pierrot le fou. Masculin Féminin. 2 or 3 Three Things I Know About Her. La Chinoise. Sympathy for the Devil. Weekend. Band of Outsiders. I return to these films again and again and again. I first saw most of them decades ago. They never get old. They have enriched my life enormously just by existing.
I don’t know quite how to say it except in blunt language: I’m not sure who I’d be without this moment …
in my life.
Or this:
Or this shot:
There are so many more. These moments, scenes, images aren’t outside of me. They’re in me. It’s like James Dean in his red jacket in Rebel Without a Cause… or Brando on his knees screaming in Streetcar… or Bette Davis walking across a room in … anything. It’s like Al Pacino on the sidewalk in front of the bank in Dog Day Afternoon, or Elvis sliding down the seesaw in the “Jailhouse Rock” number. It’s like Joan Crawford’s silhouette. These things have STAYING power and significance and meaning for me and they come up again and again as references – cultural, emotional …
Speaking of all of this … Godard was fully aware of his own frame of references and how they impacted him, working on him subconsciously and consciously. He put all of it into his movies. Check out the girls’ bathroom in his1957 short All the Boys are Called Patrick.
You could see this as “ironic”, I suppose. And, of course, Godard employed irony. Lots of it. But part of his seismic impact was the enthusiasm behind the irony. It wasn’t JUST post-modern piecing together of disconnected fragments. This is the landscape of our dreams.
There are *so many* Godard moments that operate like this for me. Anna Karina’s FACE, in general. It’s not just a beautiful face. It’s an important face. Once you see it, you are just a little bit altered. Things won’t be the same again, because now you know her face.
Godard revolutionized the movies – in the same way John Cassavetes did, or the Beatles did with music (or … the Stones: no wonder Godard worked with them) – Breathless went off like a BOMB across the water, and the reverberations shook Hollywood out of its stupor. Breathless inspired a generation. The most amazing thing is that they – i.e. the French New Wave people – took our (meaning: American Hollywood directors) so-called trash – our B-movies, our crime noirs, our rock ‘n roll bobby-sox “we hate our parents” movies – they took our FLUFF and redeemed it, loved it more than our “serious” movies, reflected our “trash” back to us and showed us the brightness of its gleam. The French saved for us what was special about what we were doing, until we were ready to claim it again and perceive its value. I mean, all of these super cool French directors adored Johnny Guitar, written off by most American critics, but fetishized totally – and rightly so – by the French. I mean, check this out. Banging the drum for Johnny Guitar.
The French New Wave pre-dates my life on the planet, but as soon as I “got into” cinema, I became aware of this crowd – Godard and Truffaut and Agnes Varda and Chabrol and etc. You can’t avoid them, not if you’re into movies. In the same way you can’t avoid Kurosawa or Bergman or etc. I may have been a child of the 80s, but I paid very close attention to Roger Ebert’s columns and these names came up all the time and I wanted to learn: Who is that?
I found out.
And I discovered Breathless, and Band of Outsiders and Contempt and Weekend and, and and ….. I joined the crowd.
It’s Godard’s world. We’re just living in it. He lived such a long life. I will miss knowing he’s out there.
Here’s parts 1 and 2.
Sam Phillips and Johnny Cash
1966:
1968:
Two years.
TWO. YEARS.
It took me a while to get this up. Shit’s BUSY. Here’s what I watched and saw in August.
What Josiah Saw (2022; d. Vincent Grashaw)
Pretty grim watch. I reviewed for Ebert.
Married at First Sight, Seasons 10 and 11 and 5
Early August was wild. I watched one season of this back in 2020 when my concentration was so shot I could only deal with binge-watching (I was weirdly relieved when I learned I was not alone in this very specific situation). My sister Siobhan also got really into it and through conversing about it with her recently I decided to check out some other seasons. And so …. I did. I get so invested.
Emily the Criminal (2022; d. John Patton Ford)
God, this was great. Exhilarating. I reviewed for Ebert.
Elvis (2022; d. Baz Luhrmann)
Again.
Follow That Dream (1962; d. Gordon Douglas)
I love this movie. My pal Larry called it “Elvis’ Occupy Wall Street movie” and I co-sign. This is a really wonderful Elvis movie and it is currently not streaming.
Kid Galahad (1962; d. Phil Karlson)
I will never not be fascinated by how this movie career coalesced – and calcified – in such a specific way. Never to be repeated again. They cannot be analyzed with the same rubric you use for other movies. They require their own criteria. He’s adorable here, gleaming and beautiful, with lots of shots like this one.
I Just Killed My Dad (2022; d. Skye Borgman)
What a terrible story. I can’t even believe it. I watched with a sense of AWE that shit could go this wrong. It makes you question things, big things, like … “why do such things happen? How can God allow such things?” You know. The big questions. Terrible story.
Spin Me Round (2022; d. Jeff Baena)
I reviewed for Ebert. More Aubrey Plaza! Plus Molly Shannon and Alison Brie.
Girls! Girls! Girls! (1962; d. Norman Taurog)
This movie is so weird and so entertaining. But if you think about it for more than five seconds you’re like …. wait. What? See above my comments about Kid Galahad. The way this all turned out and shook down is just so fascinating and BIZARRE. Plus; he looks so fucking great in this.
Funny Pages (2022; d. Owen Kline)
I get excited when a movie today allows itself to be grim, unexpected, and uningratiating. Funny Pages is grim as hell. There’s something missing, maybe, but in general this really works. I reviewed for Ebert.
Who Is Ghislaine Maxwell? (2022; d. Erica Gornall)
I honestly learned more about her in this than I ever wanted to, and I am – admittedly – pretty heavily (and mortifyingly) up to date on the Epstein story. But this doc features interviews with people who knew Ghislaine when – many of whom have never spoken up before. Some are interviewed while maintaining anonymity. That’s how threatened they feel. But some are more than happy to come out and express how weird this broad was, even way back in the day. Christina Oxenberg is the STAR of this documentary. (The Oxenbergs don’t mess around. Catherine and her daughter India have become the stars of the NXIUM story. Very impressed). Oxenberg’s comments are so insightful and she speaks as someone who was friends with Ghislaine and spent a lot of time with Ghislaine and Epstein. She is mercilessly articulate.
It Happened at the World’s Fair (1963; d. Norman Taurog)
There’s a lot to say about this one. Little Kurt Russell kicking Elvis’ shin. The relationship Elvis forms with the little girl, who’s somehow lost her grandfather in the crowd. She is a very natural child, just like Kurt Russell is a natural child – she doesn’t seem like a precocious little child-actor. She’s funny and keeps up with Elvis and he seems to have had fun. One of my favorite acting moments in Elvis’ whole career is in It Happened at the World’s Fair.
Fun in Acapulco (1963; d. Richard Thorpe)
This is the one where Elvis suffers from PTSD due to a tragic trapeze accident. Thankfully, he has not one, not two, but three women chasing after him to help him come to terms. One of whom is Ursula Andress.
Viva Las Vegas (1964; d. George Sidney)
This movie is pure entertainment, start to finish.
Double Wedding (1937; d. Richard Thorpe)
How had I not seen this? It stars William Powell – as a bohemian wannabe movie director – and Myrna Loy – as a snooty woman trying to stop her sister from getting mixed up in the bohemian crowd. But that’s just the premise. This is a screwball, and the final sequence – the “double wedding” sequence – which isn’t sorted out until the very last moment, Shakespeare-style – is absolute lunacy. I fell over laughing a couple of times. The visual gags, the callbacks, and how Myrna Loy – so imperious at the start – literally falls apart (see below). She can no longer maintain her dignity. I also just want to point something out: Check out the name of the director and then slowly scroll up this list, checking out the directors. You won’t have to look for long. Life is interesting.
Kissin Cousins (1964; d. Gene Nelson)
Why ya gotta do Elvis like this: 1. make fun of hillbillies and 2. make him play an identical twin. Okay not a brother, but still an identical twin. Elvis lost his twin brother. I mean, I know nobody cared about this shit, and maybe it wasn’t common knowledge then? I’d have to look into it. There’s something really chilling going on in this movie beyond putting Elvis in it: it’s PRO nuclear-armament, and the triumph in the end is the United States governments’, who have convinced these mountain people that it will be okay to build a missile silo on the top of their mountain. That’s literally a WIN in this movie. It starts out like Ruby Ridge, with isolated people under siege by their own military, with Elvis as go-between, and finally … the mountain people cave, but only because Elvis brokers a deal where these mountain people will no longer be harassed to pay taxes. This is some wild shit – and goes towards proving what my friend Charlie wrote about in his book Opening Wednesday at a Drive-In Near You: that critically-ignored B-movies, or genre movies, often “say more” about the world we live in than the more serious (self-serious) message movies do. Of course … those B-movies often employ irony, whereas Kissin Cousins decidedly does NOT. This movie is propaganda for the Cold War – at the same time that every single Army person in this movie is shown to be idiotic, horny, incompetent. This is just two years after Elvis’ Occupy Wall Street movie. The ’60s were a trip. Nobody knew what the fuck was going on.
The Cathedral (2022; d. Ricky D’Ambrose)
This is such a unique film. The story isn’t unique, but the way it is told really held my interest. I reviewed for Ebert.
“Whoever reads me will be in the thick of the scrimmage, and if he doesn’t like it – if he wants a safe seat in the audience – let him read somebody else.” — D.H. Lawrence, 1925
D.H. Lawrence was born on this day.
A real pioneer in his day, especially in the battle against censorship, against prudery, against SELF-censorship, some of his stuff can seem rather silly now. Maybe it sounded silly back then too! (Read the quotes of his contemporaries. Many of them were like, “Enough with the sex stuff.”) I never really got into his novels, although my dad tells stories about how, as a youth, he (and his friends) would flip through them, looking only for the dirty parts. So I can’t really speak to his novels. I know his work meant a lot to Tennessee Williams. Lawrence inspired many people.
I love some of his poems, especially the animal poems. People who get mad at people who “anthropomorphize” animals need to seriously get a life. YESTERDAY.
There’s a lot of complete nonsense in his poetry. It is very difficult not to roll your eyes at all that mystical commingling and yearning phalluses and etc. Yeah, we get it, sex is wonderful, we all love to do it. But there’s also something really intellectual about Lawrence. He’s not really a libertine, not at all, and so his sex stuff can seem rather labored, like … he’s just thinking about it too damn much. I realize I say this from the comfy confines of the 21st century and I give him the props for pushing the boundaries of what could be said, what would be allowed to be said, and all that. His books were controversial for decades, and you read them now and wonder, “Good lord, what was all the fuss about.”
Whitman was his main inspiration: you can hear Whitman’s lines ringing through Lawrence’s lines. There’s the same high-arched ceiling of SELF SELF SELF, the same transcendent grasping soul, etc. But for some reason, Whitman’s poems have more staying power (hm, a sexual phrase. A propos.)
Tennessee Williams was obsessed with D.H. Lawrence and worked on many plays over his life focusing on Lawrence and on Lawrence’s notorious wife Frieda. Some are one-acts, some unfinished full-lengths. On one of his early cross-country journeys, Williams made a pilgrimage to New Mexico, hoping to get meet Frieda and get her blessing for his project. Lawrence may very well be a man of his time and his time only but he casts a very long shadow. You can hear echoes of his work in other writers even today.
The Beats were influenced by Lawrence. They liked the sense of going “into a zone”, where the connections fly freely, where the “riff” is all. It was Allen Ginsberg who said “first thought best thought”. Lawrence would have understood.
Here are two of Lawrence’s animal poems.
The Elephant Is Slow to Mate
The elephant, the huge old beast,
is slow to mate;
he finds a female, they show no haste
they wait
for the sympathy in their vast shy hearts
slowly, slowly to rouse
as they loiter along the river-beds
and drink and browse
and dash in panic through the brake
of forest with the herd,
and sleep in massive silence, and wake
together, without a word.
So slowly the great hot elephant hearts
grow full of desire,
and the great beasts mate in secret at last,
hiding their fire.
Oldest they are and the wisest of beasts
so they know at last
how to wait for the loneliest of feasts
for the full repast.
They do not snatch, they do not tear;
their massive blood
moves as the moon-tides, near, more near
till they touch in flood.
Snake
A snake came to my water-trough
On a hot, hot day, and I in pyjamas for the heat,
To drink there.
In the deep, strange-scented shade of the great dark carob-tree
I came down the steps with my pitcher
And must wait, must stand and wait, for there he was at the trough before
me.
He reached down from a fissure in the earth-wall in the gloom
And trailed his yellow-brown slackness soft-bellied down, over the edge of
the stone trough
And rested his throat upon the stone bottom,
And where the water had dripped from the tap, in a small clearness,
He sipped with his straight mouth,
Softly drank through his straight gums, into his slack long body,
Silently.
Someone was before me at my water-trough,
And I, like a second comer, waiting.
He lifted his head from his drinking, as cattle do,
And looked at me vaguely, as drinking cattle do,
And flickered his two-forked tongue from his lips, and mused a moment,
And stooped and drank a little more,
Being earth-brown, earth-golden from the burning bowels of the earth
On the day of Sicilian July, with Etna smoking.
The voice of my education said to me
He must be killed,
For in Sicily the black, black snakes are innocent, the gold are venomous.
And voices in me said, If you were a man
You would take a stick and break him now, and finish him off.
But must I confess how I liked him,
How glad I was he had come like a guest in quiet, to drink at my water-trough
And depart peaceful, pacified, and thankless,
Into the burning bowels of this earth?
Was it cowardice, that I dared not kill him? Was it perversity, that I longed to talk to him? Was it humility, to feel so honoured?
I felt so honoured.
And yet those voices:
If you were not afraid, you would kill him!
And truly I was afraid, I was most afraid, But even so, honoured still more
That he should seek my hospitality
From out the dark door of the secret earth.
He drank enough
And lifted his head, dreamily, as one who has drunken,
And flickered his tongue like a forked night on the air, so black,
Seeming to lick his lips,
And looked around like a god, unseeing, into the air,
And slowly turned his head,
And slowly, very slowly, as if thrice adream,
Proceeded to draw his slow length curving round
And climb again the broken bank of my wall-face.
And as he put his head into that dreadful hole,
And as he slowly drew up, snake-easing his shoulders, and entered farther,
A sort of horror, a sort of protest against his withdrawing into that horrid black hole,
Deliberately going into the blackness, and slowly drawing himself after,
Overcame me now his back was turned.
I looked round, I put down my pitcher,
I picked up a clumsy log
And threw it at the water-trough with a clatter.
I think it did not hit him,
But suddenly that part of him that was left behind convulsed in undignified haste.
Writhed like lightning, and was gone
Into the black hole, the earth-lipped fissure in the wall-front,
At which, in the intense still noon, I stared with fascination.
And immediately I regretted it.
I thought how paltry, how vulgar, what a mean act!
I despised myself and the voices of my accursed human education.
And I thought of the albatross
And I wished he would come back, my snake.
For he seemed to me again like a king,
Like a king in exile, uncrowned in the underworld,
Now due to be crowned again.
And so, I missed my chance with one of the lords
Of life.
And I have something to expiate:
A pettiness.
D.H. Lawrence, watching a Zeppelin raid in London, 1915:
So it is the end–our world is gone, and we are like dust in the air.
Michael Schmidt, Lives of the Poets:
Lawrence represents a zigzaggy middle way between the revolutions of Pound and Eliot and the counterrevolution based on Hardy.
Saul Bellow:
I have a special interest in Joyce; I have a special interest in Lawrence. I read certain poets over and over again. I can’t say where they belong in my theoretical scheme; I only know that I have an attachment to them. Yeats is one such poet. Hart Crane is another. Hardy and Walter de la Mare. I don’t know what these have in common – probably nothing. I know that I am drawn repeatedly to these men.
From Paris Review interview with Rebecca West:
Rebecca West: I’ve never been able to do just one draft. That seems a wonderful thing. Do you know anyone who can?
Paris Review Interviewer: I think DH Lawrence did.
Rebecca West: You could often tell.
Harold Bloom, Best Poems in the English Language:
Lawrence’s early poetry (some of it very good) stemmed from Thomas Hardy’s work, just as Lawrence’s first novels were Hardyesque. Whitman induced enormous ambivalences in Lawrence, but that seems to me a frequent element in the drama of poetic influence. Lawrence was furious at Whitman’s excesses in representing the democratic merging of his own identity with others.
D.H. Lawrence:
Whitman, the great poet, has meant so much to me. Whitman, the one man breaking a way ahead.
Camille Paglia, “Love Poetry”:
Love poetry of the twentieth century is the most varied and sexually explicit since classical antiquity. Yet Neruda writes searing odes to physical passion, boiling with ecstatic elemental imagery. D.H. Lawrence similarly roots the sex impulse in the seasonal cycles of the animal world.
Tennessee Williams, letter to Joseph Hazan, September 3, 1940:
Read the collected letters of D.H. Lawrence, the journals and letters of Katharine Mansfield, of Vincent van Gogh. How bitterly and relentlessly they fought their way through! Sensitive beyond endurance and yet enduring. Of course Van Gogh went mad in the end and Mansfield and Lawrence bought fought a losing battle with degenerative disease–T.B.–but their work is a pure shaft rising out of that physical defeat. A permanent, pure, incorruptible thing, far more real, more valid than their physical entities ever were. They cry aloud to you in their work–no, more vividly, intimately, personally than they could have cried out to you with their living tongues. They live, they aren’t dead. That is the one inelectable gift of the artist, to project himself beyond time and space through grasp and communion with eternal values. Even this maybe a relative good, a makeshift. Canvas fades, languages are forgotten. But isn’t there beauty in the fact of their passion, so much of which is replete with the purest compassion?
The Norton Anthology of Modern Poetry:
Like William Blake, Lawrence sees humans as imprisoned within their bodies, their “bowels of steel”–mechanisms grown incapable of genuine feeling. They are imprisoned within their egoism as well. Lawrence speaks of it as a “barbed-wire enclosure of Know Thyself.” And they are imrpisoned within sexual taboos that destroy their ability to feel and think by isolating the processes of feeling and thinking from each other.
“The Poet”
by H.D.
No,
I don’t pretend, in a way, to understand,
nor know you,
nor even see you.
I say,
“I don’t grasp his philosophy,
and I don’t understand,”
but I put out a hand, touch a cold door,
(we have both come from so far);
I touch something imperishable;
I think,
why should he stay there?
why should he guard a shrine so alone,
so apart,
on a path that leads nowhere?
he is keeping a candle burning in a shrine
where nobody comes,
there must be some mystery
in the air
about him,
he couldn’t live alone in the desert,
without vision to comfort him,
there must be voices somewhere.
Joan Didion:
“The people I did the most work on were Henry James and D.H. Lawrence, who I was not high on. He irritated me on almost every level … And the writing was so clotted and sentimental… I think he just had a clotted and sentimental mind.”
D.H. Lawrence on Thomas Hardy, 1928:
What a commonplace genius he has; or a genius for the commonplace.
Joyce Carol Oates:
If Lawrence hadn’t written those novels he would have been far more readily acclaimed as one of the greatest poets in the language. As it is, however, his poetry has been neglected. (At least until recently.)
The Norton Anthology of Modern Poetry:
Sexual intercourse is for Lawrence less a physical act than a mystical mode, so that his endorsement of it is oddly grim.
Camille Paglia, “Tournament of Modern Personae: D.H. Lawrence’s Women In Love“:
The two deepest thinkers on sex in the twentieth century are Sigmund Freud and D.H. Lawrence. Their reputations as radical liberators were so universally acknowledged that brooding images of Freud and Lawrence in poster form adorned the walls of students in the Sixties.
Tennessee Williams, letter to Andrew Lynden, March 1943:
Life is more serious than all these things. D.H. Lawrence was the only [one] who realized how serious it was and his writing which is honest about it seems grotesque. Chekhov knew but also knew it would be grotesque if you tried to say it, so there is always the beautiful incompletion, the allusion and delicacy which Lawrence lost, with a sense of a deeper knowledge under it all.
Robert Graves:
“…sick, muddle-headed, sex-mad D.H. Lawrence who wrote sketches for poems, but nothing more…”
from “A Letter to Lord Byron”
By W.H. Auden
I know I’ve not the least chance of survival
Beside the major travellers of the day.
I am no Lawrence who, on his arrival,
Sat down and typed out all he had to say;
I am not even Ernest Hemingway.
I shall not run to a two-bob edition,
So just won’t enter for the competition…
Preserve me from the Shape of Things to Be;
The high-grade posters at the public meeting,
The influence of Art on Industry,
The cinemas with perfect taste in seating;
Preserve me, above all, from central heating.
It may be D. H. Lawrence hocus-pocus,
But I prefer a room that’s got a focus…
I met a chap called Layard and he fed
New doctrines into my receptive head.
Part came from Lane, and part from D. H. Lawrence;
Gide, though I didn’t know it then, gave part.
They taught me to express my deep abhorrence
If I caught anyone preferring Art
To Life and Love and being Pure-in-Heart.
I lived with crooks but seldom was molested;
The Pure-in-Heart can never be arrested.
Harold Bloom, Best Poems in the English Language:
Lawrence evolved his own prophetic religion (fiercely denounced by the churchwardenly T.S. Eliot in After Strange Gods) in which Christ and Lawrence merge as an image of resurrection (see the late novella The Man Who Died). Nonconformist Protestant without being Christian, Lawrence belongs to the English prophetic tradition, with Milton, Blake, and Shelley. His art, he insisted, was for the sake of life, and it is.
Saul Bellow:
I really don’t take Lawrence’s sexual theories very seriously. I take his art seriously, not his doctrine. But he himself warned us repeatedly not to trust the artist. He said trust the work itself.
Camille Paglia, “Tournament of Modern Personae: D.H. Lawrence’s Women In Love“:
Partly because of his proletarian roots, Lawrence is hypersensitive to social class and documents working-class experience without sentimentalizing it. Contemptuous of bourgeois niceties, he is conscious of his complicity, as a writer, with middle-class experience. Wealth and aristocracy appear in his work as artifice and mannerism, a glamorous imprisonment of mind and body.
Ford Madox Ford, Portraits from Life (1937):
I cannot say that I liked Lawrence much.
D.H. Lawrence:
“[My] real poems [have] the ghost in them. They seemed to me to come from somewhere, I don’t quite know where, out of a me whim I din’t know and didn’t want to know, and say things I would much rather not have said.”
Camille Paglia, Sexual Personae:
Like D.H. Lawrence, [William] Blake wants sex to transcend social names and identities. Also like Lawrence, he desires a return to naturalness without succumbing to nature.
The Norton Anthology of Modern Poetry:
Lawrence opposed contemporary verse. He objected to W.B. Yeats’s poetry as sickly and A.E. Housman’s as stale. He was more sympathetic to Thomas Hardy, who, like him, cultivated a poetry of deliberate roughness, of intense and complicated feeling.
Poet James Reeves:
[Lawrence] had not the craftsman’s sense of words as living things, as ends in themselves. Words were too much means to an end…He can seldom have conceived a poem as a whole before he sat down to write it. It grew under his pen.
Camille Paglia, “Tournament of Modern Personae: D.H. Lawrence’s Women in Love“:
One of Lawrence’s major insights, a basic principle of Hinduism and Zen Buddhism, is that words cannot possibly correspond to or fully convey ultimate truths about life or the universe. By rhythmic repetition, surreal imagery, and heightened, operatic phrasings, beyond French poststructuralism, with its bourgeois pendantry and preciosity. The characters of Women in Love struggle toward understanding, their rational and verbal resources overwhelmed by the influx of unsorted sensory data and by eruptions of amoral unconscious impulses.
D.H. Lawrence, 1913:
If I take my whole, passionate, spiritual and physical love to the woman who in return loves me, that is how I serve God … All of which I read in the anthology of Georgian Poetry.
Michael Schmidt:
Eventually he came to sound like the Nietzsche of Also Sprach Zarathustra, big-voiced and assertive, with an inevitable loss of delicacy and precision. Yet he never settled entirely into one particular mode: his travels, his prose writing and reading always affect the supple, unstable style. Yet each poem bears his voice-print: it is hard to mistake his writing for that of any other poet.
Joyce Carol Oates, what male writers have been effective in depictions of women:
Tolstoy, Lawrence, Shakespeare, Flaubert … Very few, really. But then very few women have been effective in their depiction of men.
Saul Bellow:
“A certain openness to experience, yes. And a willingness to trust one’s instinct, to follow it freely – that Lawrence has.”
Camille Paglia, “Tournament of Modern Personae: D.H. Lawrence’s Women in Love“:
Like Freud, Lawrence strips away the false frills of Victorianism, the lugubrious pieties of institutionalized humanitarianism, which have sprung to renewed life in our own time. Because he has no illusions about our innate altruism, Lawrence is a keen analyst of criminality, which, again like Freud, he sees simmering in all apparently civilized people.
D.H. Lawrence, letter to Edward Marsh, 1913:
It all depends on the pause, the lingering of the voice according to feeling – it is the hidden emotional pattern that makes poetry, not the obvious form.
Michael Schmidt:
Lawrence can be read as a sometimes shrewd diagnostician, a revolutionary avant la lettre, who saw what poetry might do and how his contemporaries were selling it short. But because his prose work took precedence, or he lacked sufficient formal imagination, or because the time was not quite right, he did not write the poems his criticism proposed.
Saul Bellow:
“What does the radicalism of radical writers nowadays amount to? Most of it is hand-me-down bohemianism, sentimental populism, D.H. Lawrence-and-water, or imitation Sartre. For American writers radicalism is a question of honor. They must be radicals for the sake of their dignity. They see it as their function, and a noble function, to say nay, and to bite not only the hand that feeds them (and feeds them with comic abundance, I might add) but almost any other hand held out to them. Their radicalism, however, is contentless. A genuine radicalism, which truly challenges authority, we need desperately.
Camille Paglia, “Tournament of Modern Personae: D.H. Lawrence’s Women in Love“:
Lawrence [shows] fallen sexuality as a cruel cycle of dominance and submission, where male power and male neediness are identical and where woman drinks man’s energy as he spills it.
Michael Schmidt:
Lawrence is direct, in his writing, and makes no bones about it.
D.H. Lawrence, 1908 letter:
“My verses are tolerable–rather pretty, but not suave; there is some blood in them. Poetry now a days seems to be a sort of plaster-cast craze, scraps sweetly moulded in easy Plaster of Paris sentiment. Nobody chips verses earnestly out of the living rock of his own feeling…Before everything I like sincerity, and a quickening spontaneous emotion. I do not worship music of the ‘half-said thing.'”
Camille Paglia, “Tournament of Modern Personae: D.H. Lawrence’s Women in Love“:
Lawrence’s importance for the Sixties was not just as a prophet of sex but as an expander of consciousness. For him, love in the Western sense is not enough; he would reject today’s idolatry of “relationships” as parochial and limiting. As a Romantic, he exalts profound understanding over politics.
The Norton Anthology of Modern Poetry:
[Perhaps] his most notable poems or passages are bursts of unified perception, characterized by brutal honesty of observation. He pries open the lid, whatever the box may hold. It is the honesty of a person with a preconceived idea, not of a detached observer. He disturbs whatever he touches; he goads and is goaded. Another rather surprising aspect of his poetry is its dignity. He respects, and demands that his readers respect, the things and experiences he values. Lines that other poets would find too raw–“It was the flank of my wife / I touched with my hand. I clutched with my hand” (“New Heaven and Earth”)–are in context not ridiculous, though when excerpted they may appear so. In addition to honest and dignity, his verse has a more fundamental quality of dynamism, a concentrated apprehension of the inner life of animals and flowers. No poet has a more uncanny sense of what it is like to be, for example, a copulating tortoise (“Lui et Elle”). Lawrence asks of nature not What principles of order and harmony can I find here? but rather, What is the center of violent feeling here? This he elicits with great distinctiveness.
D.H. Lawrence, 1908:
“My verses are tolerable – rather pretty, but not suave; there is some blood in them. Poetry now a days seems to be a sort of plaster-cast craze, scraps sweetly moulded in easy Plaster of Paris sentiment. Nobody chips verses earnestly out of the living rock of his own feeling … Before everything I like sincerity, and a quickening spontaneous emotion. I do not worship music or the ‘half said thing’.”