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The Fighter_Literary Essays

Page 29

by Tim Parks


  ‘There is a stillness and a softness in these great grassy mounds with their ancient stone girdles, and down the central walk [of the burial ground] there lingers still a kind of loneliness and happiness … The same when we went down the few steps, and into the chambers of rock, within the tumulus. There is nothing left. It is like a house that has been swept bare … But whoever it is that has departed, they have left a pleasant feeling behind them …’37

  All his adult life, Lawrence had sought to live as a pagan in the modern world. Not an atheist, atheism being, as he saw it, just a negative dogmatism brought into being by monotheistic religion. He had looked for a way out of repressive Christian morality, while never seeking to be either immoral or amoral. And he had likewise looked for a way out of the general scramble for money and social status. But the supreme test of any life comes with the imminence of death. Reconstructing the mindset of these people who left us almost nothing but their tombs, yet whose tombs impart a deep sense of peace, Lawrence is seeking to prepare himself for the final journey.

  It’s a beautiful story. Crawling into one burial chamber after another with his friend, a guide and a couple of candles, Lawrence examines the many paintings on the ancient walls, conjuring up from their strange detail and symbolism the Etruscan way of life, their aesthetic sense, their religious practices, social hierarchy, how they lived in intimate contact with their bodies and nature. ‘The things they did,’ he remarks, ‘in their easy centuries, are as natural and as easy as breathing. They leave the breast breathing freely and pleasantly, with a certain fullness of life.’38

  For a man who suffered such severe lung problems, this was an achievement to yearn for. Finally, Lawrence had found a pre-modern culture that did not disappoint him as, over recent years, Sardinia, Ceylon, Mexico and New Mexico had all in their different ways disappointed. The reason is obvious. The Etruscans are no longer around to bother Lawrence with poor food, indifferent table manners and dodgy sanitation.

  Or are they? The key to a reading of Etruscan Places is the idea of continuity. ‘Death, to the Etruscan, was a pleasant continuance of life, with jewels and wine and flutes playing for the dance. It was neither an ecstasy of bliss, a heaven, nor a purgatory of torment. It was just a natural continuance of the fullness of life. Everything was in terms of life, of living.’39

  If a sense of continuity is the right approach to death, then Lawrence will reproduce the principle in his book. Where another writer would have focused entirely on the Etruscans, on the tombs and their paintings, he moves freely between the artefacts of past millennia and the modern Tuscan landscape outside, between reflections on migration in the fifth century BC and the boy who drives him and his friend across the low, windy hills in a pony cart, and then the hotel proprietors, the waiters, the part-time guide who works on the railways, the young German archaeologist at once so knowledgeable and so unimpressed. With a sureness of touch that isn’t quite there in the earlier works, Lawrence leaves it to the reader to grasp the connection between the Fascist busybody determined to examine his passport in Civitavecchia and the Romans who destroyed the Etruscans. And he is entirely convincing when he finds in the faces and manners of the local village women the same traits he has seen in the underground paintings. One way or another, he decides, the Etruscans will always be with us. And slowly but surely this ease of movement between ancient and modern, burial chamber and hotel room, begins to establish a curious mood of alert tranquillity, something as far from the Doomsday defiance of the earlier Lawrence as one could possibly imagine.

  An Etruscan prince, Lawrence tells us, would have ‘a little bronze ship of death’40 on the stone bed beside his sarcophagus. The prince, unlike his people, was an initiate in the mysteries of the cosmos, and above all in the ‘mystery of the journey out of life and into death’.41 He was at once a ruler and a priest. ‘Try as you may,’ Lawrence remarks, and certainly he had tried, ‘you can never make the mass of men throb with full awakedness … Only a few are initiated into the mystery of the bath of life, and the bath of death.’42

  Now, visiting the tombs of the Etruscan princes, Lawrence feels a growing identity with these ruler priests. He too is an initiate in life’s mysteries. He too would build his ship of death, a vessel that might take him across the stormy waters beyond the final horizon of being. Etruscan Places marks the moment when Lawrence consciously began to build that boat. It would not be complete until, on his deathbed, he wrote the extraordinary poem ‘Ship of Death’. As with Etruscan Places, the tone was one of quiet, unblinkered acceptance. ‘Oh build your ship of death,’ runs one short stanza,

  … your little ark

  and furnish it with food, with little cakes, and wine for the dark flight down oblivion.43

  Reading these lines, it’s hard not to remember the kitchenino of Sea and Sardinia, so carefully packed for the voyage out, hard not to think of the little cakes that he and his queen bee sought so avidly in Trapani and Cagliari, and indeed of all the dark wine drunk, chapter after chapter, in these three remarkable books on Italy. As with the Etruscan paintings he so lovingly described, the sense of continuity between life and death is powerful. Perhaps, at the very end, Lawrence had managed to become truly pagan.

  Places and dates of first publication

  * * *

  Lawrence – The Fighter: New York Review, September 25, 2003

  Bassani – Gardens and Graveyards: New York Review, July 14, 2005

  Dostoevsky – After the Struggle: The Nation, June 14, 2004

  Mussolini – The Illusionist: New York Review, April 7, 2005

  Hardy – Fear is the Key: New York Review, April 12, 2007

  The Disenchantment of Translation: Paper delivered at Katha Utsav, Delhi, January 6, 2004

  Beckett – Still Stirring: New York Review, July 13, 2006

  Bernhard – Genius of Bad News: New York Review, January 11, 2007

  Jelinek – Let Sleeping Beauties Lie: New York Review, July 19, 2007

  Cioran – A Polished Pessimism: Spectator, 1996

  Machiavelli – True Scandal: Introduction to The Prince, The Folio Society, London, 2006

  A Model Anomaly: New York Review, October 18, 2001

  Lorenzo – Mad at the Medici: New York Review, May 1, 2003

  Fleur Jaeggy – Love Letter: New York Review, February 12, 2004

  Hypertext – Tales Told by a Computer: New York Review, October 24, 2002

  Zola – Real Dreams: Introduction to The Dream, Hesperus Press, London, 2005

  World Cup Football – A Matter of Love and Hate: New York Review, July 18, 2002

  Garibaldi – Hero Betrayed: New Yorker, June 2007

  1848 – Siege of the Serenissima: London Review of Books, December 1, 2005

  D’Annunzio – The Superman’s Virgins: Introduction to D’Annunzio, The Book of Virgins, Hesperus, 2003

  Lawrence and Italy – A Pagan in Italy: Introduction to D. H. Lawrence and Italy: Etruscan Places, Sea and Sardinia, Twilight in Italy, Penguin Classics, 2007

  References

  * * *

  The page references in this section refer to the printed edition from which this ebook was created.

  The Fighter

  1. D. H. Lawrence, Apocalypse (London, Penguin, 1995), p.60

  2. D. H. Lawrence, The Letters of D. H. Lawrence, Vol. IV (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1979), p.108

  3. Ibid., VIII, p.114

  4. Jeffrey Meyers, D. H. Lawrence: A Biography (New York, Cooper Square Press, 2002), p.17

  5. Ibid., p. 17

  6. Michael Squires and Lynn K. Talbot, Living at the Edge: A Biography of D. H. Lawrence & Frieda von Richthofen (Madison, University of Wisconsin Press, 2002), p.199

  7. Meyers, p.18

  8. D. H. Lawrence, Women in Love (London, Penguin, 1982), p.541

  9. Meyers, p.27

  10. Ibid., p.52

  11. Ibid., p.54

  12. Ibid., p.50

  13. Lawrence, Letters, VIII, p.3r />
  14. Philip Callow, Body of Truth: D. H. Lawrence – The Nomadic Years, 1919–1930 (Chicago, Ivan R. Dee, 2004), p.xii

  15. Ibid., p.x

  16. Anne Fernihough, The Cambridge Companion to D. H. Lawrence (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2001), p.7

  17. Callow, p.155

  18. Geoff Dyer, Out of Sheer Rage (London, Abacus, 2003), p.113

  19. Lawrence, Letters, V, p.519

  20. Cambridge Companion to D. H. Lawrence, p.34

  21. D. H. Lawrence, Lady Chatterley’s Lover (London, Penguin, 2006), p.328

  22. Ibid., p.332

  23. D. H. Lawrence, The Complete Short Novels (London, Penguin, 1982), p.155

  24. Women in Love, p.431

  25. Ibid., p.397

  26. Fiona Becket, The Complete Critical Guide to D. H. Lawrence (London, Routledge, 2002), p.51

  27. Cambridge Companion to D. H. Lawrence, p.7

  28. D. H. Lawrence, Studies in Classic American Literature (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2002), p.14

  29. Squires and Talbot, p.274

  30. Meyers, p.241

  31. Lady Chatterley, p.101

  32. Lawrence, Letters, III, p.92

  33. Lawrence, Studies, p.17

  34. Callow, p.83

  35. Critical Guide to D. H. Lawrence, p.61

  36. D. H. Lawrence, Foreword to Women in Love (New York, Thomas Seltzer, 1920)

  37. Lawrence, Letters, V, p.201

  38. Women in Love, p.349

  39. Meyers, p.109

  Gardens and Graveyards

  Quotations are from the Italian edition of Il giardino dei Finzi-Contini, and translated by myself.

  1. Giorgio Bassani, Il giardino dei Finzi-Contini (Turin, Einaudi, 1999), p.39

  2. Ibid., p.128

  3. Ibid., p.263

  After the Struggle

  1. Leonid Grossman, Dostoevsky, His Life and Work, trans. Mary Mackler (Indianapolis, Bobbs-Merrill, 1975), p.552

  2. Joseph Frank, Dostoevsky, The Seeds of Revolt, 1821–1849 (Princeton, Princeton University Press, 1976), p.270

  3. Grossman, p.495

  4. Fyodor Dostoevsky, Notes from Underground, trans. Richard Pevear and Larissa Volokhonsky (London, Everyman, 2004), p.5

  5. Fyodor Dostoevsky, Notes from Underground, trans. Jessie Coulson (London, Penguin, 1972), p.18

  6. Loc. cit.

  7. Loc. cit.

  8. Joseph Frank, Dostoevsky, The Stir of Liberation (Princeton, Princeton University Press, 1986), p.252

  9. Notes (Pevear and Volokhonsky), p.54

  10. Frank, The Star of Liberation, p.57

  11. Notes (Coulson), p.29

  12. Notes (Pevear and Volokhonsky), p.6

  13. Ibid., p.7

  14. Ibid., p.6

  15. Ibid., p.7

  16. Ibid., p.11

  17. Notes (Coulson), p.54

  18. Ibid., p.59

  19. Loc. cit.

  20. Ibid., p.60

  21. Ibid., p.61

  22. Grossman, p.396

  23. Notes (Coulson), p.100

  24. Notes (Pevear and Volokhonsky), p.118

  25. Notes (Coulson), p.123

  26. Notes (Pevear and Volokhonsky), p.94

  27. Frank, The Star of Liberation, p.295

  28. Notes (Coulson), p.122

  29. Frank, The Star of Liberation, p.224

  30. Notes (Coulson), pp.50–1

  The Illusionist

  1. Nicholas Farrell, Mussolini: A New Life (London, Phoenix Press, 2005), p.32

  2. Ibid., p.37

  3. Encyclopaedia Britannica, entry on Mussolini

  4. Richard Bosworth, Mussolini (London, Hodder Arnold, 2003), p.116

  5. Farrell, p.113

  6. Ibid., p.124

  7. Ibid., p.120

  8. Ibid., p.126

  9. Ibid., p.7

  10. Bosworth, p.114

  11. Peter Neville, Mussolini (London, Routledge, 2003), p.36

  12. Ibid., p.12

  13. Giacomo Leopardi, Discorso sopra lo stato presente dei costumi degl’italiani (Milan, Feltrinelli, 1991), p.47

  14. Ibid., p.51

  15. Farrell, p.111

  16. Renzo De Felice, Mussolini il duce, Gli anni del consenso,1929–1936 (Turin, Einaudi, 1996), p.50

  17. Denis Mack Smith, Garibaldi: A Great Life in Brief (Greenwood Press, 1982)

  18. De Felice, p.48

  19. Farrell, p.111

  20. Ibid., p.46

  21. Ibid., p.101

  22. Bosworth, p.262

  23. De Felice, p.20

  24. Ibid., p.51

  25. Farrell, p.305

  26. De Felice, p.50

  27. Bosworth, p.296

  28. Ibid., p.216

  29. Farrell, p.93

  30. Ibid., p.359

  31. Ibid., p.304

  32. Ibid., p.305

  33. Bosworth, p.346

  34. Ibid., p.340

  35. Ibid., p.338

  36. Ibid., p.342

  37. Farrell, p.311

  38. Ibid., p.112

  Fear is the Key

  1. Claire Tomalin, Thomas Hardy (New York, Penguin Press, 2006), p.222

  2. Ibid., p.223

  3. Ibid., p.222

  4. Ibid., p.288

  5. Ibid., p.24

  6. Ibid., p.323

  7. Thomas Hardy, Jude the Obscure (New York, Signet, 1999), p.17

  8. Thomas Hardy, Tess of the D’Urbervilles (London, Penguin, 2003), p.24

  9. Ibid., p.49

  10. Tomalin, p.27

  11. Loc. cit.

  12. Ibid., p.40

  13. Ibid., p.46

  14. Ibid., p.82

  15. Ibid., p.70

  16. Ibid., p.64

  17. Loc. cit.

  18. Thomas Hardy, The Complete Poems, ed. James Gibson (London, Palgrave, 2001), p.312

  19. Tess, p.74

  20. Ibid., p.200

  21. Tomalin, p.273

  22. Tess, p.169

  23. Tomalin, p.228

  24. Tess, p.123

  25. Ibid., p.183

  26. Ibid., p.151

  27. Ibid., p.170

  28. Ibid., p.152

  29. Ibid., p.225

  30. Ibid., p.229

  31. Loc. cit.

  32. Ibid., p.182

  33. Ibid., p.234

  34. Poems, p.237

  35. Tomalin, p.247

  36. Poems, p.313

  37. Tomalin, p.231

  38. Tess, p.xix

  39. Ibid., p.xx

  40. Thomas Hardy, Far From the Madding Crowd (London, Penguin, 2000), p.8

  41. Thomas Hardy, The Return of the Native (New York, Bantam, 1981), p.5

  42. Ibid., p.47

  43. Tess, p.85

  44. Loc. cit.

  45. Ibid., p.226

  46. Tomalin, p.224

  47. Loc. cit.

  48. Ibid., p.259

  49. Ibid., p.239

  50. Ibid., p.170

  51. Thomas Hardy’s Personal Writings (New York, University Press of Kansas, 1969), p.124

  52. Poems, p.346

  53. Tomalin, p.322

  54. Poems, p.553

  The Disenchantment of Translation

  1. Quoted in Barbara Milberg Fisher, Noble Numbers, Subtle Words: The Art of Mathematics in the Science of Storytelling (Madison, NJ, Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, 1997), p.32

  2. Loc. cit.

  3. Paul Celan, Gesammelte Werke (Frankfurt, Suhrkamp, 1983), Vol. III, p.175

  4. Ernest Hemingway, The Snows of Kilimanjaro (Milan, Mondadori Parallel Texts, 1992), p.132

  5. D. H. Lawrence, Women in Love (London, Penguin, 1982), p.430

  6. J. M. Coetzee, Disgrace (London, Vintage, 2000), p.117

  Still Stirring

  1. Samuel Beckett, The Grove Centenary Edition, Vol. IV, p.492

  2. E. M. Cioran, Anathemas and Admirations, trans. Richard Howard (London, Quartet, 1992), p.129, footnote 1

  3.
Beckett Remembering, Remembering Beckett, ed. James and Elizabeth Knowlson (New York, Arcade, 2006), p.295

  4. Ibid., p.293

  5. Ibid., p.189

  6. Ibid., p.299

  7. Cioran, p.135

  8. Beckett, Centenary Ed., I, p.3, footnote 2

  9. Ibid., IV, p.503

  10. Samuel Beckett, Disjecta (London, Calder, 1983), p.171

  11. Loc. cit.

  12. Beckett, Centenary Ed., I, p.27

  13. Ibid., II, p.407

  14. Ibid., IV, p.472

  15. Ibid., I, p.164

  16. S. E. Gontarski and Anthony Uhlmann, Beckett After Beckett: Essays (Gainesville, Florida University Press, 2006), p.67

  17. Beckett, Centenary Ed., I, p.205

  18. Ibid., I, p.211

  19. Beckett Remembering, p.113

  20. Ibid., p.105

  21. Ibid., p.109

  22. Anne Atik, How It Was: A Memoir of Samuel Beckett (New York, Shoemaker & Hoard, 2001), p.95

  23. Beckett, Centenary Ed., I, p.370

  24. Ibid, p.369

  25. Ibid., p.379

  26. Ibid., II, p.190

  27. Ibid., IV, p.430

  28. Beckett Remembering, p.174

  29. Beckett, Centenary Ed., III, p.40

  30. Cioran, p.129

  31. Beckett Remembering, p.166

  Genius of Bad News

  1. Gitta Honegger, Thomas Bernhard: The Making of an Austrian (New Haven, CT, and London, Yale University Press, 2001), this is the quotation that opens the book, page unnumbered

  2. Ibid., p.xiii

  3. Thomas Bernhard, The Lime Works, trans. Sophie Wilkins (Chicago, University of Chicago Press, 1986), p.47

  4. Honegger, p.8

  5. Ibid., p.31

  6. Ibid., p.42

  7. Loc. cit.

  8. Ibid., p.57

  9. Ibid., p.64

  10. Thomas Bernhard, Frost, trans. Michael Hofmann (New York, Knopf, 2006), p.9

  11. Ibid., p.15

  12. Ibid., p.94

  13. Thomas Bernhard, Gargoyles, trans. Richard and Clara Winston (Chicago, University of Chicago Press, 1986), pp.12, 13

  14. Ibid., pp.181, 182

  15. Honegger, p.118

  16. Ibid., p.36

  17. Ibid., p.13

 

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