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Biography of D.H. Lawrence

D.H. Lawrence

D.H. Lawrence (1885 - 1930)


David Herbert Lawrence (11 September 1885 - 2 March 1930) was one of the most important, certainly one of the most controversial, English writers of the 20th century, who wrote novels, short stories, poems, plays, essays, travel books, and letters.

The son of a coal miner, Lawrence was born in Eastwood, Nottinghamshire, United Kingdom. His mixture of working and middle class parents and their often volatile relationship had a great impact on the literature of this English writer. In 1902 he contracted pneumonia and his career as a factory clerk, which had barely started, came to an end. He began training as a teacher first teaching the sons of miners in his home town and then returning to education to receive a teaching certificate from University College Nottingham in 1908.

While working as a teacher in Croydon some of his poetry came to the attention of Ford Maddox Hueffer editor of The English Review, who commissioned the story 'Odour of Chyrsanthemums' which, when published in that magazine, provoked a London publisher to ask Lawrence for more work, and his career in literature began. Shortly after his first novel was published, The White Peacock, in 1910 Lawrence's mother died after a long illness. It is suggested by some that Lawrence may have helped his mother to die by giving her an overdose. Lawrence, the author of Sons And Lovers, (1913), had an extremely close relationship with his mother and her death was a major turning-point in his life just as the death of Mrs Morel forms a major turning-point in the novel.

Pneumonia struck again soon after his mother's death and this lead to the tuberculosis which would eventually kill him. He decided on his recovery to abandon teaching to concentrate on writing. In 1912 Lawrence eloped to Germany with Frieda Weekley née von Richthofen (distant cousin of Manfred von Richthofen, also known as "the Red Baron"), the wife of his modern languages professor from Nottingham University. They returned to England at the outbreak of World War I and were married on the 13 July 1914. Because of Frieda's German parentage and Lawrence's pacifism they were viewed with suspicion in England during the war and lived in near poverty. The Rainbow (1915) was suppressed after an investigation into its obscenity in 1915. They were even accused of spying and signalling to German submarines off of the coast of Cornwall where they lived.

After the war Lawrence began what he termed his 'savage pilgrimage'. He left England, to return only twice for short visits, and with Frieda spent the rest of his life travelling, settling down for only short periods. His travels took him to France, Italy, Ceylon, Australia, America and Mexico. He dreamed of establishing a utopian community on the ranch in Taos, New Mexico where he lived for several years but another bout of pneumonia forced him to return to Europe where he lived in Italy, while writing the various versions of Lady Chatterley's Lover (1929), which was published in private editions in Paris.

He died in Vence, France in 1930. Frieda returned to live on the ranch in Taos and later brought Lawrence's ashes to rest there.

His birthplace, in Eastwood, 8a Victoria Street, is now a museum.


Biography by: This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License and uses material adapted in whole or in part from the Wikipedia article on D.H. Lawrence.


109 Poems written by D.H. Lawrence

The poems are by default sorted according to volume, but you can also choose to sort them alphabetically or by page views.

Volume | Alphabetically | [Page Views] | Comments | First Lines


Page ViewsPoemComments
19339 Self-pity Comments and analysis of Self-pity by D.H. Lawrence 46 Comments
5539 Snake Comments and analysis of Snake by D.H. Lawrence 1 Comment
4426 Lies About Love
4273 Dreams Comments and analysis of Dreams by D.H. Lawrence 4 Comments
3560 Piano
3424 The White Horse Comments and analysis of The White Horse by D.H. Lawrence 2 Comments
3258 Butterfly Comments and analysis of Butterfly by D.H. Lawrence 2 Comments
2837 A Love Song Comments and analysis of A Love Song by D.H. Lawrence 1 Comment
2770 Whales Weep Not! Comments and analysis of Whales Weep Not! by D.H. Lawrence 2 Comments
2572 The Ship of Death Comments and analysis of The Ship of Death by D.H. Lawrence 4 Comments
2567 The End Comments and analysis of The End by D.H. Lawrence 2 Comments
2499 To Women As Far As I'm Concerned Comments and analysis of To Women As Far As I'm Concerned by D.H. Lawrence 3 Comments
2351 Beautiful Old Age
2281 Tortoise Shell
2267 A Baby Running Barefoot Comments and analysis of A Baby Running Barefoot by D.H. Lawrence 1 Comment
2250 A Spiritual Woman
2153 The Piano (Notebook Version)
1960 Silence Comments and analysis of Silence by D.H. Lawrence 1 Comment
1943 A Winter's Tale
1929 How Beastly The Bourgeois Is Comments and analysis of How Beastly The Bourgeois Is by D.H. Lawrence 1 Comment
1906 A Baby Asleep after Pain Comments and analysis of A Baby Asleep after Pain by D.H. Lawrence 3 Comments
1873 Elegy Comments and analysis of Elegy by D.H. Lawrence 1 Comment
1862 Baby Tortoise Comments and analysis of Baby Tortoise by D.H. Lawrence 1 Comment
1855 Brother and Sister
1815 Sorrow
1808 The Song of a Man Who has Come Through
1787 Discipline
1785 Mystery
1774 The Elephant Is Slow To Mate Comments and analysis of The Elephant Is Slow To Mate by D.H. Lawrence 2 Comments
1726 In a Boat
1697 Drunk
1691 Bavarian Gentians
1677 Irony
1670 We are Transmitters
1618 Bat Comments and analysis of Bat by D.H. Lawrence 1 Comment
1590 Search for Truth
1519 If You are a Man Comments and analysis of If You are a Man by D.H. Lawrence 1 Comment
1505 A Sane Revolution Comments and analysis of A Sane Revolution by D.H. Lawrence 2 Comments
1502 Cruelty and Love
1494 Patience
1454 After Many Days Comments and analysis of After Many Days by D.H. Lawrence 1 Comment
1454 Thought Comments and analysis of Thought by D.H. Lawrence 1 Comment
1432 Lui Et Elle
1414 Nothing To Save
1402 Anxiety
1390 Green
1386 The Bride
1379 Belief
1341 Tortoise Family Connections
1263 Trees In The Garden
1250 Blue
1227 Brooding Grief
1213 The Deepest Sensuality
1208 Conceit
1191 The Mystic Blue Comments and analysis of The Mystic Blue by D.H. Lawrence 1 Comment
1185 The Enkindled Spring
1175 Virgin Youth
1154 Tortoise Shout
1148 The Prophet
1116 Birdcage Walk
1112 In Trouble and Shame
1102 Intimates
1089 Worm Either Way
1084 Monologue of a Mother
1057 At the Window
1056 Tease
1027 Listening
1022 Gloire de Dijon
1016 The Wild Common
1009 The Revolutionary
995 Dissolute
993 Ballad of Another Ophelia
946 Discord in Childhood
935 Scent of Irises
925 Craving for Spring Comments and analysis of Craving for Spring by D.H. Lawrence 1 Comment
923 Restlessness Comments and analysis of Restlessness by D.H. Lawrence 1 Comment
910 The Gods! The Gods!
880 Study
860 The Punisher
821 Troth with the Dead
818 New Year's Eve
804 Tortoise Gallantry
799 Mating
793 Willy Wet-Leg
791 The Virgin Mother
780 Conundrums
778 Snap-Dragon Comments and analysis of Snap-Dragon by D.H. Lawrence 1 Comment
772 Dreams Old
757 Last Words to Miriam Comments and analysis of Last Words to Miriam by D.H. Lawrence 1 Comment
753 Epilogue
747 Lotus Hurt by the Cold
736 Service of all the Dead
728 Dolor of Autumn
713 Reproach
712 A Passing Bell
709 Submergence
696 Firelight and Nightfall
680 Dreams Nascent
680 Giorno dei Morti Comments and analysis of Giorno dei Morti by D.H. Lawrence 2 Comments
662 Liaison
660 Meeting Among the Mountains
646 Excursion
630 The Inheritance
619 Perfidy
607 A Youth Mowing
601 The Hands of the Betrothed
566 Grey Evening
555 Malade
555 Week-Night Service


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