I lived from 1885-1930.
I was from England, and am in the English category.
David Herbert Lawrence, novelist, short-story writer, poet and essayist, was born in Eastwood, Nottinghamshire, England, in 1885. Though better known as a novelist, Lawrence's first-published works (in 1909) were poems, and his poetry, especially his evocations of the natural world, have since had a significant influence on many poets on both sides of the Atlantic. His early poems reflect the influence of Ezra Pound and Imagist movement, which reached its peak in the early teens of the twentieth century. When Pound attempted to draw Lawrence into his circle of writer-followers, however, Lawrence decided to pursue a more independent path.
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He believed in writing poetry that was stark, immediate and true to the mysterious inner force which motivated it. Many of his best-loved poems treat the physical and inner life of plants and animals; others are bitterly satiric and express his outrage at the puritanism and hypocrisy of conventional Anglo-Saxon society. Lawrence was a rebellious and profoundly polemical writer with radical views, who regarded sex, the primitive subconscious, and nature as cures to what he considered the evils of modern industrialized society. Tremendously prolific, his work was often uneven in quality, and he was a continual source of controversy, often involved in widely-publicized censorship cases, most famously for his novel Lady Chatterley's Lover (1928). His collections of poetry include Look! We Have Come Through (1917), a collection of poems about his wife; Birds, Beasts, and Flowers (1923); and Pansies (1929), which was banned on publication in England.
Besides his troubles with the censors, Lawrence was persecuted as well during World War I, for the supposed pro-German sympathies of his wife, Frieda. As a consequence, the Lawrences left England and traveled restlessly to Italy, Germany, Ceylon, Australia, New Zealand, Tahiti, the French Riviera, Mexico and the United States, unsuccessfully searching for a new homeland. In Taos, New Mexico, he became the center of a group of female admirers who considered themselves his disciples, and whose quarrels for his attention became a literary legend. A lifelong sufferer from tuberculosis, Lawrence died in 1930 in France, at the age of 44.
bibliography sourceoets.org
Popular poetry
I never saw a wild thing
sorry for itself.
4 lines, 2 comments
Always, sweetheart, Carry into your room the blossoming boughs of cherry,
17 lines
Outside the house an ash-tree hung its terrible whips,
And at night when the wind arose, the lash of the tree
9 lines, 1 comment
Round clouds roll in the arms of the wind,
The round earth rolls in a clasp of blue sky,
53 lines, 1 comment
It ought to be lovely to be old
to be full of the peace that comes of experience
16 lines, 1 comment
If you make a revolution, make it for fun,
don't make it in ghastly seriousness,
20 lines
Reject me not if I should say to you
I do forget the sounding of your voice,
24 lines, 1 comment
A snake came to my water-trough
On a hot, hot day, and I in pyjamas for the heat,
73 lines, 4 comments
My world is a painted fresco, where coloured shapes
Of old, ineffectual lives linger blurred and warm;
50 lines, 2 comments
We are a liars, because
the truth of yesterday becomes a lie tomorrow,
9 lines, 3 comments
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