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A mistake one can make when writing about
a D.H. Lawrence novel, is to assume that
the narrative is indicative of what is actually
going on. Perhaps one not accustomed with
Lawrence’s works could believe such,
but not I. As Lawrence is known for his
sharp analysis of human psychology, it is
his use of sexual eroticism, as a tool to
pry open the nature of his characters, that
most of his works revolve around.
I
discovered this when reading Women in Love.
I found myself sensing that the novel was
about ‘something different.’
(I usually find myself feeling ‘something
different,’ anyway. As I’m rather
romantic on the thought of not blending
with mass opinion…But perhaps it is
that very notion that throws me right back
in with the masses.)
Regardless,
I read the book--and found out what it was
really about. The novel was about freedom.
Of course, in this case it was about sexual
freedom, but the whole notion of freedom
cannot be ignored.
The
two main female characters, Ursula and Gudrun,
are fascinating people. One can argue that
they are only trying to seem so [fascinating],
but I felt throughout the book that they
were genuinely interesting characters. They
chose their way in life. They chose their
lovers. And they determined by themselves
the evolution of their erotic existence.
The
two men, Gerald and Birkin--at first glance,
they seem rather ‘gay’. Consider
the scene where they get drunk and decide
to wrestle…then decide that wrestling
naked would much better do the trick. Afterwards,
they fall asleep in each others arms. I
know what most have gotten or will get from
that scene, but what did I see? I saw two
characters, so comfortable with their heterosexuality
that they could publicly manifest any form
of homosexuality--without any qualms. They
seemed to mock the attitude of the world
with an offensively coy “Has it happened
to you?” They took the highroad of
“I know what I am and who I am; I
don’t need to show it.” What
better irony than to see people force themselves
to believe something else?
As
I implied earlier, the story’s actual
plot is quite simple, and not to be insisted
upon. Ursula becomes involved with Birkin.
Gudrun chooses Gerald. One of the couples
finds love. The other death. If you choose
to read the book only for the narrative
aspect, you could better use your time with
something else. Look within this book and
see what it really tells us. That we are
living, thinking, and deciding creatures--ready
to make any choice we want. That for us,
there are no faux boundaries to abide by.
That we can exist beyond the common boundaries
that most contain themselves to. And simply,
that we are free.

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