Lawrence, D(avid) H(erbert) | Merle R. Rubin (essay date spring 1981)

Merle R. Rubin (essay date spring 1981)

SOURCE: Rubin, Merle R. “‘Not I, but the Wind That Blows through Me’: Shelleyan Aspects of Lawrence's Poetry.” Texas Studies in Literature and Language 23, no. 1 (spring 1981): 102-22.

[In the following essay, Rubin discusses parallels between the poetry of D. H. Lawrence and the works of English Romantic poet Percy Bysshe Shelley (1792-1822).]

Despite Lawrence's strenuous denials of influence, specific influences upon his poetry are clearly discernible. In addition to Whitman, Wordsworth, and Blake,1 other influences were the King James Bible, the Nonconformist hymns of Lawrence's chapel youth, and the poetry of the Pre-Raphaelites, Swinburne, and Hardy. The early love poems are faintly Pre-Raphaelite in their vivid attention to color and detail and more than faintly Swinburnian in their plangent use of small, simple words (“sweet,” “cool,” “pain,” “ache,”...

[The entire page is 9549 words long]

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