Lawrence example essay topic
Lawrence had a difficult relationship with his home town, which was until recently in a coal mining area and, as an academic and a person interested in books and poetry rather than earning a living through his own physical labours was regarded as 'different'. His contemporizes did not have fond memories of him and it has only been in recent times that Eastwood has begun to grant him the recognition he deserves. Lawrence himself was deeply affected by his early years in the town and much of his writings use the locality as a backdrop, especially the contrast between mining town and unspoiled countryside, the life and culture of the miners, and the problems between his parents. He always referred to the Eastwood district as 'the country of my heart' but this was an affection born more of absence than anything else.
I strongly recommend you visit my web page covering the mining background to Lawrence's works. After attending Beau vale Boys School he won a scholarship to Nottingham High School (1898-1901) and it is interesting that in his final year he obtained only thirteenth place in English, out of a class of twenty seven. He left school at 16 to earn a living as clerk in a surgical appliance factory in Nottingham, but he had to give up work after a first attack of pneumonia. Convalescing, he began visiting the Hangs Farm nearby and began an intense friendship with Jessie Chambers He became a pupil-teacher in Eastwood in 1902 and, encouraged by Jessie, began to write in 1905; his first story being published in a local newspaper in 1907. He subsequently studied at University College, Nottingham, from 1906 to 1908, earning a teachers' certificate, and went on writing poems and stories and drafting his first novel. In the year of 1911 Lawrence had another attack of pneumonia and decided to give up teaching and live by writing.
He also fell in love and eloped with Frieda Weekly (n e von Richthofen), the German wife of a professor at Nottingham. The couple went first to Germany and then to Italy, They were married in England in 1914 after Frieda's divorce. During World War I Lawrence and his wife were trapped in England and living in poverty although he managed to avoid conscription. After World War I Lawrence left the country for Italy and never again returned to Eastwood or Great Britain.
He died in Vence, France on March 2nd, 1930..