Description

Book Synopsis

Croydon, England, was the setting of the famous three-way friendship of D. H. Lawrence, Jessie Chambers, and Helen Corke, all of whom made literary records of their association, and all of whom appeared as characters in Lawrence novels. Perhaps the most objective of these records were Helen Corke’s, which became difficult to acquire. Their scarcity and their continuing usefulness were the stimulus for publication of this volume, which contains in four statements Helen Corke’s “major comment on Lawrence the man and Lawrence the artist.”

The “Portrait of D. H. Lawrence, 1909–1910,” a section from Corke’s unpublished autobiography, gives the reader glimpses into the earliest stages of the Lawrence-Corke friendship, when Lawrence worked to bring meaning back into Corke’s life after she had suffered a tragic loss. The “Portrait” tells of conversations before a log fire, German lessons, the reading of poetry, and s

Table of Contents

  • Introduction
  • Preface
  • Acknowledgments
  • List of Illustrations
  • Portrait of D. H. Lawrence, 1909–1910
  • D. H. Lawrence’s "Princess": A Memory of Jessie Chambers
  • Concerning The White Peacock
  • Lawrence & Apocalypse
  • Index

D. H. Lawrence

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    A Paperback / softback by Helen Corke, Warren Roberts

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      Publisher: University of Texas Press
      Publication Date: 01/01/1965
      ISBN13: 9781477300756, 978-1477300756
      ISBN10: 1477300759

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Croydon, England, was the setting of the famous three-way friendship of D. H. Lawrence, Jessie Chambers, and Helen Corke, all of whom made literary records of their association, and all of whom appeared as characters in Lawrence novels. Perhaps the most objective of these records were Helen Corke’s, which became difficult to acquire. Their scarcity and their continuing usefulness were the stimulus for publication of this volume, which contains in four statements Helen Corke’s “major comment on Lawrence the man and Lawrence the artist.”

      The “Portrait of D. H. Lawrence, 1909–1910,” a section from Corke’s unpublished autobiography, gives the reader glimpses into the earliest stages of the Lawrence-Corke friendship, when Lawrence worked to bring meaning back into Corke’s life after she had suffered a tragic loss. The “Portrait” tells of conversations before a log fire, German lessons, the reading of poetry, and s

      Table of Contents

      • Introduction
      • Preface
      • Acknowledgments
      • List of Illustrations
      • Portrait of D. H. Lawrence, 1909–1910
      • D. H. Lawrence’s "Princess": A Memory of Jessie Chambers
      • Concerning The White Peacock
      • Lawrence & Apocalypse
      • Index

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