Chapter 1
Ours is
essentially a tragic age, so we refuse to take it tragically. The cataclysm has
happened, we are among the ruins, we start to build up
new little habitats, to have new little hopes. It is rather hard work: there is
now no smooth road into the future: but we go round, or scramble over the
obstacles. We've got to live, no matter how many skies have fallen.
This was
more or less Constance Chatterley's position. The war had brought the roof down
over her head. And she had realized that one must live and learn.
She
married Clifford Chatterley in 1917, when he was home for a month on leave.
They had a month's honeymoon. Then he went back to Flanders: to be shipped over
to England again six months later, more or less in bits. Constance, his wife,
was then twenty-three years old, and he was twenty-nine.
His hold
on life was marvellous. He didn't die, and the bits
seemed to grow together again. For two years he remained in the doctor's hands.
Then he was pronounced a cure, and could return to life again, with the lower
half of his body, from the hips down, paralysed for ever.
This was
in 1920. They returned, Clifford and Constance, to his home, Wragby Hall, the family `seat'. His father had died,
Clifford was now a baronet, Sir Clifford, and Constance was Lady Chatterley.
They came to start housekeeping and married life in the rather forlorn home of
the Chatterleys on a rather inadequate income.
Clifford had a sister, but she had departed. Otherwise there were no near
relatives. The elder brother was dead in the war. Crippled for
ever, knowing he could never have any children, Clifford came home to
the smoky Midlands to keep the Chatterley name alive while he could.
He was not
really downcast. He could wheel himself about in a wheeled chair, and he had a
bath-chair with a small motor attachment, so he could drive himself slowly
round the garden and into the line melancholy park, of which he was really so
proud, though he pretended to be flippant about it.
Having
suffered so much, the capacity for suffering had to some extent left him. He
remained strange and bright and cheerful, almost, one might say, chirpy, with
his ruddy, healthy-looking face, arid his pale- blue, challenging bright eyes.
His shoulders were broad and strong, his hands were very strong. He was
expensively dressed, and wore handsome neckties from Bond Street. Yet still in
his face one saw the watchful look, the slight vacancy of a cripple.
He had so
very nearly lost his life, that what remained was wonderfully precious to him.
It was obvious in the anxious brightness of his eyes, how proud he was, after
the great shock, of being alive. But he had been so much hurt that something
inside him had perished, some of his feelings had gone. There was a blank of
insentience.
Constance,
his wife, was a ruddy, country-looking girl with soft brown hair and sturdy
body, and slow movements, full of unusual energy. She had big, wondering eyes,
and a soft mild voice, and seemed just to have come from her native village. It
was not so at all. Her father was the once well-known R. A., old Sir Malcolm
Reid. Her mother had been one of the cultivated Fabians in the palmy, rather pre- Raphaelite days. Between artists and
cultured socialists, Constance and her sister Hilda had had what might be
called an aesthetically unconventional upbringing. They had been taken to Paris
and Florence and Rome to breathe in art, and they had been taken also in the
other direction, to the Hague and Berlin, to great
Socialist conventions, where the speakers spoke in every civilized tongue, and
no one was abashed.
The two
girls, therefore, were from an early age not the least daunted by either art or
ideal politics. It was their natural atmosphere. They were at once cosmopolitan
and provincial, with the cosmopolitan provincialism of art that goes with pure
social ideals.
They had
been sent to Dresden at the age of fifteen, for music among other things. And
they had had a good time there. They lived freely among the students, they
argued with the men over philosophical, sociological and artistic matters, they
were just as good as the men themselves: only better, since they were women.
And they tramped off to the forests with sturdy youths bearing guitars,
twang-twang! Theysang the Wandervogel
songs, and they were free. Free! That was the great word. Out in the open
world, out in the forests of the morning, with lusty and splendid-throated
young fellows, free to do as they liked, and---above all---to say what they
liked. It was the talk that mattered supremely: the impassioned interchange of
talk. Love was only a minor accompaniment.
Both Hilda
and Constance had had their tentative love-affairs by the time they were
eighteen. The young men with whom they talked so passionately and sang so
lustily and camped under the trees in such freedom wanted, of course, the love connexion. The girls were doubtful, but then the thing was
so much talked about, it was supposed to be so important. And the men were so
humble and craving. Why couldn't a girl be queenly, and give the gift of
herself?
So they
had given the gift of themselves, each to the youth with whom she had the most
subtle and intimate arguments. The arguments, the discussions were the great
thing: the love-making and connexion were only a sort
of primitive reversion and a bit of an anti-climax. One was less in love with
the boy afterwards, and a little inclined to hate him, as if he had trespassed
on one's privacy and inner freedom. For, of course, being a girl, one's whole
dignity and meaning in life consisted in the achievement of an absolute, a
perfect, a pure and noble freedom. What else did a girl's life mean? To shake
off the old and sordid connexions and subjections.
And
however one might sentimentalize it, this sex business was one of the most
ancient, sordid connexions and subjections. Poets who
glorified it were mostly men. Women had always known there was something
better, something higher. And now they knew it more definitely than ever. The
beautiful pure freedom of a woman was infinitely more wonderful than any sexual
love. The only unfortunate thing was that men lagged so far behind women in the
matter. They insisted on the sex thing like dogs.
And a
woman had to yield. A man was like a child with his appetites. A woman had to
yield him what he wanted, or like a child he would probably turn nasty and
flounce away and spoil what was a very pleasant connexion.
But a woman could yield to a man without yielding her inner, free self. That
the poets and talkers about sex did not seem to have taken sufficiently into
account. A woman could take a man without really giving herself away. Certainly
she could take him without giving herself into his power. Rather she could use
this sex thing to have power over him. For she only had to hold herself back in
sexual intercourse, and let him finish and expend himself without herself
coming to the crisis: and then she could prolong the connexion
and achieve her orgasm and her crisis while he was merely her tool.
Both
sisters had had their love experience by the time the war came, and they were
hurried home. Neither was ever in love with a young man unless he and she were
verbally very near: that is unless they were profoundly interested, TALKING to
one another. The amazing, the profound, the unbelievable thrill there was in
passionately talking to some really clever young man by the hour, resuming day
after day for months...this they had never realized till it happened! The paradisal promise: Thou shalt have men to talk to!---had never been uttered. It was fulfilled before they
knew what a promise it was.
And if
after the roused intimacy of these vivid and soul-enlightened discussions the
sex thing became more or less inevitable, then let it. It marked the end of a
chapter. It had a thrill of its own too: a queer vibrating thrill inside the
body, a final spasm of self-assertion, like the last word, exciting, and very
like the row of asterisks that can be put to show the end of a paragraph, and a
break in the theme.
When the
girls came home for the summer holidays of 1913, when Hilda was twenty and
Connie eighteen, their father could see plainly that they had had the love
experience.
L'amour avait passé par là, as somebody puts it. But he was a man of
experience himself, and let life take its course. As for the mother a nervous
invalid in the last few months of her life, she only wanted her girls to be
`free', and to `fulfil themselves'. She herself had never been able to be
altogether herself: it had been denied her. Heaven knows why, for she was a
woman who had her own income and her own way. She blamed her husband. But as a
matter of fact, it was some old impression of authority on her own mind or soul
that she could not get rid of. It had nothing to do with Sir Malcolm, who left
his nervously hostile, high-spirited wife to rule her own roost, while he went
his own way.
So the
girls were `free', and went back to Dresden, and their music, and the
university and the young men. They loved their respective young men, and their
respective young men loved them with all the passion of mental attraction. All
the wonderful things the young men thought and expressed and wrote, they thought
and expressed and wrote for the young women. Connie's young man was musical,
Hilda's was technical. But they simply lived for their young women. In their
minds and their mental excitements, that is. Somewhere else they were a little
rebuffed, though they did not know it.
It was
obvious in them too that love had gone through them: that is, the physical
experience. It is curious what a subtle but unmistakable transmutation it
makes, both in the body of men and women: the woman more blooming, more subtly
rounded, her young angularities softened, and her expression either anxious or
triumphant: the man much quieter, more inward, the very shapes of his shoulders
and his buttocks less assertive, more hesitant.
In the
actual sex-thrill within the body, the sisters nearly succumbed to the strange
male power. But quickly they recovered themselves, took the sex-thrill as a
sensation, and remained free. Whereas the men, in gratitude to the woman for
the sex experience, let their souls go out to her. And afterwards looked rather
as if they had lost a shilling and found sixpence. Connie's man could be a bit
sulky, and Hilda's a bit jeering. But that is how men are! Ungrateful and never
satisfied. When you don't have them they hate you because you won't; and when
you do have them they hate you again, for some other reason. Or for no reason
at all, except that they are discontented children, and can't be satisfied
whatever they get, let a woman do what she may.