Hello my little bookhounds, and welcome to yet another Word Garden Word List poetry prompt!
In my 20's, a friend told me that she thought my writing resembled that of D.H. Lawrence. It didn't, but her saying that put me on to a writer who became an immediate favorite, and one of his books in particular blew me off my chair and out the window I found it so wise and so amazing. That book was Lady Chatterly's Lover. Not that many books have fundamentally changed how I view life, but this was one that did. One line I especially loved was when Constance tells Mellors that he has the courage of his own tenderness. I never forgot that.
And so that brings us to this week's source, Tenderness by Alison MacLeod. In it, she tells the story of Lawrence in exile, trying desperately to finish this book in the time he has left. He knows it won't be published, that it is too honest and speaks too clearly of things that were not spoken of in respectable literature of the time. She then tells the story of none other than Jackie Kennedy, and her efforts to see the book--which she greatly admired--escape the censors and be published for everyone to read.
There is nothing remotely obscene about Lady Chatterly's Lover. In fact, it may be the most beautiful book I have ever read. And now there is Tenderness.
What we do here is to use at least 3 of the 20 words provided in a new, original poem of our own. Then simply link up, visit others if you are able, and then follow your heart. This prompt remains active through Saturday.
And now, your List:
affair
art
book
broken
cows
daisies
Italy
lens
madness
memo
orchids
page
spirit
spying
stone
summer
tenderness
umbrellas
vulnerable
worldly
I love his poem The Elephant is Slow to Mate.
ReplyDeleteI had never read that--indeed, have never read much of his poetry though I have read a number of his novels and short stories. Thanks for the intro, I love the poem!
DeleteHoly crap yes, D.H. Lawrence. Sons and Lovers FTW.
ReplyDeleteI've read that too. Good stuff. I remember LC'sL, S&L, and The Fox vividly, but can't recall a single thing about Women In Love!
DeleteNope. Same.
DeleteThank you Shay for leading us along a tender path - Jae
ReplyDeleteMy pleasure, Jae.
DeleteI am longing to do this one and hope to be back. Love this Shay!
ReplyDeleteHope you do, Carrie!
DeleteLove the prompt Shay. As always thanks for providing inspiration
ReplyDeleteGlad you're here, Susie!
DeleteLawrence was one of my favorites too and can barely remember Women in Love but absolutely can his poetry. It's very rare for a novelist to be a good poet too. I can only think of one other: Thomas Hardy.
ReplyDeleteI knew you were going to say Hardy before I read it. GMTA!
DeleteLove this list, Shay.
ReplyDelete