Why the Novel Matters by D.H. Lawrence
Why the
Novel Matters (D.H. Lawrence)
In an attempt to
illustrate the importance of the novel Lawrence explains the importance of life
and the living man. He says that the whole living man, the man alive, is more
important than his thoughts, ideas, his mind, or his stomach or liver or kidney
or any other parts of his body. Lawrence says that this is what scientists and
philosophers fail to understand. According to Lawrence a novel shows life and
its characters are nothing but man alive. The novelist understands the
importance of life and the man alive. Therefore the novelist is better than the
scientist or the philosopher.
Lawrence begins the
essay by commenting upon the saying ‘a sound mind in a sound body’. He calls it
a funny superstition that people think of themselves as a body with a soul in
it. He questions why one thinks of one’s hand as something subordinate to the
mind that operates it. The hand has a life of its own. It has knowledge and can
think and act for itself. The hand is as much a part of the living man as the
mind. The pen held by the hand however is not alive. A man alive extends only
to his fingertips. Lawrence says that whatever in a man is alive constitutes
the man alive. The hand, skin, freckles, blood and bones are very much alive and
part of the man alive. The living body therefore must not be compared to
inanimate objects like tin cans or clay vessels.
Lawrence in this
essay tries to explain why the novelist is better than the philosopher or the
scientist and in order to do so he explains the importance of the man alive.
According to Lawrence the novelist possesses an intricate understanding of the
man alive more fully than a parson, a philosopher, or a scientist. The parson
speaks about souls in heaven and the afterlife. But for the novelist heaven is
in the palm of his hand and the tip of his nose which are alive. The novelist
is not concerned about life after death. He is wholly concerned about life at
present and with the man alive. The philosopher speaks about infinite knowledge
possessed by the pure spirit. But for
the novelist there is no knowledge beyond what the living body can perceive.
For philosophers nothing but thoughts is important. These thoughts Lawrence
says are nothing but ‘tremulations on the ether’. They are not alive. They are
like radio signals floating in the air which are meaningless until they reach
the receiver – a radio device that decodes the signals into a meaningful
message. Similarly when thoughts are received by a man alive they become
meaningful and can alter the man’s life. But the thoughts nevertheless are not
alive. It is only because the man alive receives them that they become alive.
Only a man alive can be stimulated by thoughts. Thus the living body is more
important than the message conveyed by thoughts.
According to
Lawrence nothing is more important than life. Living things are more valuable
than dead objects. A living dog is better than a dead lion but a living lion is
better than a living dog. Lawrence says that scientists and philosophers find
it difficult to accept the value of the living. For the philosopher nothing but
thoughts matter. For the scientist a living man is of no use. He only wants a
dead man whom he dissects and observes under the microscope. For a scientist a
man is a heart, a liver, a kidney, a gland or a tissue. But for the novelist
the only thing that matters is a whole living man. Lawrence refuses to believe
that he is a body or a soul or a brain or a nervous system. He considers
himself to be a complete whole made up of all these parts, a whole that is
greater and more significant than the individual parts. And for this reason he
is a novelist and he considers himself superior to the saint, the scientist or
the philosopher.
Having established
the importance of the man alive and the novelist Lawrence proceeds to explain
the significance of the novel. Lawrence calls the novel a book of life.
According to him books are like thoughts - nothing but ‘tremulations on the
ether’. They are meaningful only when a man alive receives them. But he says
that the tremulations of a novel are more powerful than any other book and it
can make a whole man alive tremble. This means that the novel has the capacity
to influence a man more effectively than any other book. For example the ideals of Plato makes the
ideal being in a man tremble. Similarly the sermons or the Ten Commandments
affect only a part of a man alive. But a novel is capable of shaking the whole
of a man alive. This is because a novel deals in nothing else but man alive. In
this regard Lawrence calls the Bible a ‘great confused novel’. All its characters – Adam, Eve, Sarai,
Abraham, Isaac – including God are nothing but man alive. For Lawrence, the
Bible, Homer and Shakespeare are all great novels because they communicate to
the reader. Their wholeness affects the whole of man alive. They do not
stimulate growth in a particular direction but shake the whole man alive into
new life.
According to
Lawrence the strength and appeal of a novel lies in the dynamic nature of its
characters which reflects the importance of constant change in the life of a
man alive. Nothing is constant and if something is forced to remain constant it
loses its value and power along with the passing of time. There are no
absolutes. There is only a constant flow and change and even change is not
absolute. A man today is different from what he was yesterday and tomorrow he
will be different from what he is today. A man loves a woman because of the
constant change in her. It is the change that startles and defies and keeps a
man and woman in love with each other. Loving an unchanging person is like
loving an inanimate object like a pepper pot. But even amidst change one needs
to maintain one’s integrity. However Lawrence says that putting a finger on one
individual trait makes one as fixed as a lamp post. It seems as if a man has
made up an idea about himself and is trying to trim himself down to fit into
it. Lawrence says that one can learn about the importance of change from a
novel. In a novel the characters do nothing but live. But if they begin to act
according to a fixed pattern – always remaining good or bad – the novel loses
its life force. Similarly a man in his life must live and not try to follow a
pattern or else he becomes a dead man in life. Lawrence however says that it is
difficult to define what is living. Different men have different ideas about
what they mean by living in life. Some go to seek God while others seek money,
wine, and women, yet others seek votes and political reforms. In this Lawrence
says that the novel is a guide which helps to differentiate between a man alive
and a man who is dead in life. A man may eat his dinner like a man alive or
merely chew his dinner as a dead man in life. A man alive shoots his enemy but
a dead man in life throws bombs at people who are neither his friends nor foes.
Finally Lawrence says that the most important thing is to be a whole man alive and the novel provides guidance in this matter. A novel helps a man to see when a man is alive and when he is dead in life. The novel helps to develop an instinct for life. This is because the novel does not advocate a right path or a wrong path. The concept of right and wrong vary according to circumstances. A novel portrays this unpredictable and varying nature of life making the reader realize that life itself is the reason for living. The end result of the novel is the whole man alive. Thus Lawrence asserts that the novel is a book that can touch the life of a whole man alive and that is why the novel matters.
Why the
Novel Matters (D.H. Lawrence)
Q. Answer the following questions in 15-20 words:
(1) What does
Lawrence mean by “Whatever is me alive is me”?
Answer: “Whatever is
me alive is me” means one’s being alive with the consciousness of one’s
wholeness. The author firmly believes that ‘me alive’ means every part and
organ of one’s body is alive and equally important.
(2) According
to Lawrence, what is the exact meaning of living?
Answer: D. H.
Lawrence gives importance nothing else than to life. For him, he can
absolutely see life nowhere but in the
living. Life with a capital ‘L’ is only man alive.
(3) What is
the central idea of “Why Novel Matters”?
Answer: In this
essay Lawrence speaks about the importance of the novel and tries to establish
the superiority of the novelist above other professions. In an attempt to
illustrate the importance of the novel Lawrence explains the importance of life
and the living man.
(4) For what
purpose does the writer use the concept of ‘tremulation’?
Answer: The writer
means by ‘tremulation’ the vibrations in the atmosphere. Such vibrations mark
life and activity. Novel does the same trembling to bring us out from inertia
and inactivity.
Q. Answer the following questions in 30-40 words:
(1) Why is a
novelist different from a philosopher, a scientist or a stupid person?
Answer: The writer says that the whole living man,
the man alive, is more important than his thoughts, ideas, his mind, or his
stomach or liver or kidney or any other parts of his body. Lawrence says that
this is what scientists and philosophers fail to understand. According to
Lawrence a novel shows life and its characters are nothing but man alive. The
novelist understands the importance of life and the man alive. Therefore the
novelist is better than the scientist or the philosopher or a stupid person.
(2) What is
the idea of Lawrence about the Bible?
Answer: Lawrence
calls the Bible a ‘great confused novel’.
All its characters – Adam, Eve, Sarai, Abraham, Isaac – including God
are nothing but man alive. For Lawrence, the Bible, Homer and Shakespeare are
all great novels because they communicate to the reader. Their wholeness
affects the whole of man alive. They do not stimulate growth in a particular
direction but shake the whole man alive into new life.
(3) What is
the similarity between life and fiction?
Answer: Lawrence
calls the novel a book of life. According to him books are like thoughts -
nothing but ‘tremulations on the ether’. They are meaningful only when a man alive
receives them. But he says that the tremulations of a novel are more powerful
than any other book and it can make a whole man alive tremble. This means that
the novel has the capacity to influence a man more effectively than any other
book.
(4) Describe
the characteristics of a novel?
Answer: According to Lawrence the strength and appeal
of a novel lies in the dynamic nature of its characters which reflects the
importance of constant change in the life of a man alive. In a novel the
characters do nothing but live. But if they begin to act according to a fixed
pattern – always remaining good or bad – the novel loses its life force. A
novel portrays the unpredictable and varying nature of life making the reader
realize that life itself is the reason for living. Thus Lawrence asserts that
the novel is a book that can touch the life of a whole man alive and that is
why the novel matters.
Q. Answer the following questions in about 150 words
each:
(1) In what
ways is the novel, according to Lawrence, the book of life?
Answer: According to
Lawrence, the novelist alone understands that there is as much life in the hand
that writes as in the mind that thinks. Where science and philosophy privilege
mind over matter, turning man into a “dead man in life”, the novel resurrects
the “whole man alive”. Lawrence acknowledged that books do not constitute life,
but insisted that they were “tremulations on the ether” that could make the
whole man alive tremble into urgent being.
Lawrence says that
the most important thing is to be a whole man alive and the novel provides
guidance in this matter. A novel helps a man to see when a man is alive and
when he is dead in life. The novel helps to develop an instinct for life. This
is because the novel does not advocate a right path or a wrong path. The
concept of right and wrong vary according to circumstances. A novel portrays
this unpredictable and varying nature of life making the reader realize that
life itself is the reason for living. The end result of the novel is the whole
man alive. Thus Lawrence asserts that
the novel is a book that can touch the life of a whole man alive and that is
why the novel matters.
(2) “All
things flow and change, and even change is not absolute”. Discuss.
Answer: According to
Lawrence the strength and appeal of a novel lies in the dynamic nature of its
characters which reflects the importance of constant change in the life of a
man alive. Nothing is constant and if something is forced to remain constant it
loses its value and power along with the passing of time. There are no
absolutes. There is only a constant flow and change and even change is not
absolute. A man today is different from what he was yesterday and tomorrow he
will be different from what he is today. A man loves a woman because of the
constant change in her. It is the change that startles and defies and keeps a
man and woman in love with each other. Loving an unchanging person is like
loving an inanimate object like a pepper pot. But even amidst change one needs
to maintain one’s integrity. However Lawrence says that putting a finger on one
individual trait makes one as fixed as a lamp post. It seems as if a man has
made up an idea about himself and is trying to trim himself down to fit into
it. Lawrence says that one can learn about the importance of change from a
novel.
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