Contains almost all Lawrence's letters written in the last fifteen months of his life.
'This invigorating collection ... is ... a monument to scholarship for which we should be grateful.' D. H. Lawrence Review
Volume 3 of the letters presents 942 letters in the series, covering the period October 1916 to June 1921, showing the frustration he experienced in finding a publisher for Women in Love in the wake of the Rainbow prosecution.
This is the time of Lawrence's youth in Eastwood, his first year out of England - in Italy with Frieda - to the publication of Sons and Lovers. There are letters to his early loves, Jessie Chambers, Louie Burrows and Helen Corke.
This volume contains Lawrence's letters written between March 1927 and November 1928: almost 770 letters in just a year and nine months.
As late as 1913 we find the poet — the young man apparently ascendant for a time — rather sententiously writing to Henry Savage that " I'm glad you've discovered Humanity : it is fearfully nice to feel it round one .
This volume contains 942 letters written between October 1916 to June 1921.
We get Lawrence the book reviewer, writing about Death in Venice and welcoming Ernest Hemingway; Lawrence the travel writer, in Mexico and New Mexico and Italy; Lawrence the memoirist, depicting his strange sometime-friend Maurice Magnus; ...
LIBRARY HAS: v.1
The Letters of D.H. Lawrence & Amy Lowell, 1914-1925
187 52 'a bloody bore': Barry Smith, Peter Warlock: The Life of Philip Heseltine (Oxford University Press, 1994), p. 92 53 'detestably small-eyed and mean': Letters, 5 January 1916 54 'terrifying rocks': Letters, 1 February 1916 55 'she ...