T H E S I S

T H E S I S T H E S I S

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98 ulating with your ears and your nose.1' (SPS 23h) DoH,Lawrence was, after all, an anti-puritanical puritan, a self-contradictory neurotic in life* But in art he transcends these limitations, fuses them in a new synthesis, and breaks them into a new dimension of writing«-

APPENDIX NOTES 1 Title of the work by George H.Ford on D.H. Lawrence 2 Title of Richard Aldingtons critical biography on D.H.Lawrence 3 H0T.Moore quotes from Father William Tiverton (D.H.Lawrence and Human Existence,1951) in which he points out that "writers on Lawrence have ... much exaggerated his Oedipus complex", if From Lynn Croft, Eastwood, on «July 30, 1908 j cited in SPS 61. 5 R0H*Poole is co-editor of D.H.Lawrence-A Selection with P.J. Shepherd«, 6 Anthony Beal quoted from A D.H.Lawrence Miscellany« edited by H.T.Moore. 7 Lawrence preferred the German terra for "blood brotherhood". 8 The original version of The White Peacock is not available now« This censored paragraph is quoted from H*T.Moore*s The Intelligent Hearts p* 1U-3« 9 Time, magazine, July 8, 197^? New York. 10 Havelock Ellis is- quoted by Irving Wallace in The Seven Minutes. 11 Maurice Girordias, ibidem, op.cit.,p«3*f2. 12 According to Bernard Jones the three versions of Lady Chatterlev*s Lover are really three novels« The critics do not a- gree with him generally. He points outs "Although Lawrence pruned the second version drastically in making Lady Chatterley*s Lover? the latter, like its predecessor, reflects a hardening and harshening of the sympathies, and, indeed, in spite of the shortening, the third version is both the harder and the harsher of the two."(TLG V9). 13 From an undated and unidentified letter cited by Richard Hoggart in his introduction to the Penguin edition of Lady Chatterlev*s Lover« (LCL XV). 1*4-A doubtful point, as we will soon see® 15 These are complementary observations of my own to Irving Wallace ‘s informations, op.cit., p. 211.

APPENDIX<br />

NOTES<br />

1 Title of the work by George H.Ford on D.H. Lawrence<br />

2 Title of Richard Aldingtons critical biography on D.H.Lawrence<br />

3 H0T.Moore quotes from Father William Tiverton (D.H.Lawrence and<br />

Human Existence,1951) in which he points out that "writers on<br />

Lawrence have ... much exaggerated his Oedipus complex",<br />

if From Lynn Croft, Eastwood, on «July 30, 1908 j cited in SPS 61.<br />

5 R0H*Poole is co-editor of D.H.Lawrence-A Selection with P.J.<br />

Shepherd«,<br />

6 Anthony Beal quoted from A D.H.Lawrence Miscellany« edited by<br />

H.T.Moore.<br />

7 Lawrence preferred the German terra for "blood brotherhood".<br />

8 The original version of The White Peacock is not available<br />

now« This censored paragraph is quoted from H*T.Moore*s The<br />

Intelligent Hearts p* 1U-3«<br />

9 Time, magazine, July 8, 197^? New York.<br />

10 Havelock Ellis is- quoted by Irving Wallace in The Seven Minutes.<br />

11 Maurice Girordias, ibidem, op.cit.,p«3*f2.<br />

12 According to Bernard Jones the three versions of Lady Chatterlev*s<br />

Lover are really three novels« The critics do not a-<br />

gree with him generally. He points outs "Although Lawrence<br />

pruned the second version drastically in making Lady Chatterley*s<br />

Lover? the latter, like its predecessor, reflects a<br />

hardening and harshening of the sympathies, and, indeed, in<br />

spite of the shortening, the third version is both the harder<br />

and the harsher of the two."(TLG V9).<br />

13 From an undated and unidentified letter cited by Richard Hoggart<br />

in his introduction to the Penguin edition of Lady Chatterlev*s<br />

Lover« (LCL XV).<br />

1*4-A doubtful point, as we will soon see®<br />

15 These are complementary observations of my own to Irving Wallace<br />

‘s informations, op.cit., p. 211.

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