Lawrence experienced Nottingham from a walker’s perspective, first visiting before the town had become a city, and later making daily commutes from Eastwood. The centre of Nottingham remains as small and walkable as it was in back then. As part of Eastwood Comics - a project from Nottingham UNESCO City of Literature, Pop Up Projects, DH Lawrence Birthplace Museum and four education partners - a group of Y9 Eastwood students visited some of the city centre locations associated with Lawrence.
Here NottsLit visits some of the locations that Lawrence knew and wrote about:
Here NottsLit visits some of the locations that Lawrence knew and wrote about:
Boys’ High School (now Nottingham High School)
Aged twelve, Lawrence became the first boy from Eastwood to
win a County Council scholarship to the High School. At thirteen he began attending,
taking his long commute from Eastwood and back. The Boys’ High School, as
Lawrence later wrote, was ‘considered the best day school in England.’
Despite the school's standing, Lawrence failed to distinguish himself, not helped by
some of his fellow students who wouldn't accept a miner’s son as their equal. Lawrence left school in 1901 with few friends, later reflecting on the low standard
of teaching he received at both school and college.
Girls’ High School
In The Rainbow
(1915), Lawrence’s strong and spirited Ursula Brangwen attends Nottingham ‘Grammar
School’ which is the Girls’ High.
‘One went away to the
Grammar School, and left the little school, the meagre teachers, the Philipses
whom she had tried to love but who had made her fail, and whom she could not
forgive.’
And of the school:
‘The school itself had
been a gentleman’s house. Dark, sombre lawns separated it from the dark, select
avenue. But its rooms were very large and of good appearance, and from the
back, one looked over lawns and shrubbery, over the trees and the grassy slope
of the Arboretum, to the town which heaped the hollow with its roofs and
cupolas and its shadows.’ (from The
Rainbow, Ch 10)
The Arboretum is situated close to both High Schools and the
students would often meet up there. Close by is another educational
establishment of importance to Lawrence.
The Arkwright Building (NTU)
Lawrence was due to start his studies here - when it was
University College Nottingham - in 1905 but, monetarily challenged, he decided
to continue teaching for another year. By the time he attended the college he had spent three years as a
pupil-teacher in Eastwood and Ilkeston.
Lawrence was twenty-one when he began his teacher’s
certificate course in Nottingham. His professors thought he’d ‘make an excellent teacher
of upper classes,’ but added, ‘…for a large class of boys in a rough district
he would not have sufficient persistence and enthusiasm.’
Largely unimpressed by his college education Lawrence wrote
that his professors ‘went on in such a miserable jogtrot, earn-your-money
manner that I was startled… I came to feel that I might as well be taught by
gramophones… I doubted them, I began to despise or distrust things’. He left the
college two years later having achieved his certificate but without staying on
for a Bachelor’s Degree. He did admit to gaining maturity from the experience and it was during his time here that he completed the second draft of Laetitia later to become his first novel The White Peacock (1911).
In The White Peacock (p371) Lawrence comments on the smog of the
city: ‘Over the city hung a dullness, a
thin dirty canopy against the blue sky.’
It was also during this time, in 1907, that Lawrence wrote three stories for the Nottingham Guardian Christmas story competition, winning with A Prelude, entered under the name of his first girlfriend Jessie Chambers.
Here, The Arkwright Building is described through Ursula’s eyes:
It was also during this time, in 1907, that Lawrence wrote three stories for the Nottingham Guardian Christmas story competition, winning with A Prelude, entered under the name of his first girlfriend Jessie Chambers.
Here, The Arkwright Building is described through Ursula’s eyes:
'The big college built
of stone, standing in the quiet street, with its rim of grass and lime-trees
all so peaceful: she felt it remote, a magic-land. Its architecture was
foolish, she knew from her father. Still, it was different from that of all
other buildings. Its rather pretty, plaything. Gothic form was almost a style,
in the dirty industrial town. She liked the hall, with its big stone
chimney-piece of cardboard-like carved stone, with its armorial decoration,
looked silly just opposite the bicycle stand and the radiator, whilst the great
notice-board with its fluttering papers seemed to slam away all senses of
retreat and mystery from the far wall.' (from The Rainbow, Ch 15)
Just inside the main entrance, to the left, remains the ‘big
stone chimney-piece of cardboard-like carved stone...’. Next to it is a plaque with the familiar Lawrence
phoenix. The inscribed date is incorrect.
From A College Window by DH Lawrence:
The glimmer of the limes, sun-heavy, sleeping,
Goes trembling past me up the College wall.
Below, the lawn, in soft blue shade is keeping,
The daisy-froth quiescent, softly in thrall.
Beyond the leaves that overhang the street,
Along the flagged, clean pavement summer-white,
Passes the world with shadows at their feet
Going left and right.
Remote, although I hear the beggar's cough,
See the woman's twinkling fingers tend him a coin,
Beyond a world I never want to join.
(from New Poems, 1916)
After qualifying as a teacher Lawrence took up a post at an elementary school in Croydon. The experiences he gained teaching informed The Rainbow in which Ursula is a teacher.
Theatre Royal
Back to Sons and
Lovers and if the character Miriam belonged to Bestwood (Eastwood) then Clara
belonged to Nottingham. In one scene Paul invites Clara to the Theatre Royal.
'One evening of that
week Sarah Bernhardt was at the Theatre Royal in Nottingham, giving “La Dame
aux Camélias.” Paul wanted to see this old and famous actress, and he asked
Clara to accompany him.'
The French superstar did actually appear at the theatre to
great acclaim. In the novel, Paul does take Clara to the Bernhardt performance
but he’s too busy with his date to fully appreciate the actress’ emotionally
thrilling performance.
On the opposite corner, on Queen Street/Parliament Street, is
the white Grade II listed building that was once The Elite Cinema. The first
‘talkie’ in Nottingham was shown here.
In 1960, hundreds of locals crammed into The Elite to
see the movie Son and Lovers after
the Nottingham Students’ Charity Carnival Committee secured a midnight showing
on the same night of the film’s London premiere. They raised close to £400. Among
the guests was William Ernest Lawrence, nephew of DH Lawrence.
The last film to appear at The Elite was the ‘X’ certificate Take an Easy Ride, a result of the
Chatterley Trial?
Nottingham Castle
There are several visits to the castle grounds in Sons and Lovers.
Here Paul visits with
Clara:
‘The Castle grounds
were very green and fresh. Climbing the precipitous ascent, he laughed and
chattered, but she was silent, seeming to brood over something. There was
scarcely time to go inside the squat, square building that crowns the bluff of
rock. They leaned upon the wall where the cliff runs sheer down to the Park.
Below them, in their holes in the sandstone, pigeons preened themselves and
cooed softly. Away down upon the boulevard at the foot of the rock, tiny trees
stood in their own pools of shadow, and tiny people went scurrying about in
almost ludicrous importance.’
The view from the castle grounds from which these comments
on Nottingham are made:
‘Away beyond the
boulevard the thin stripes of the metals showed upon the railway-track, whose
margin was crowded with little stacks of timber, beside which smoking toy
engines fussed. Then the silver string of the canal lay at random among the
black heaps. Beyond, the dwellings, very dense on the river flat, looked like black,
poisonous herbage, in thick rows and crowded beds, stretching right away,
broken now and then by taller plants, right to where the river glistened in a
hieroglyph across the country. The steep scarp cliffs across the river looked
puny. Great stretches of country darkened with trees and faintly brightened
with corn-land, spread towards the haze, where the hills rose blue beyond grey.
“It is comforting,”
said Mrs Dawes, to think the town goes no farther. It is only a little sore
upon the country yet.”
“A little scab,” Paul
said.
She shivered. She
loathed the town. Looking drearily across the country which was forbidden her,
her impassive face pale and hostile, she reminded Paul of one of the bitter,
remorseful angels.
“But the town’s
alright,” he said; it’s only temporary. This is the crude, clumsy make-shift
we’ve practised on, till we find out what the idea is. The town will come all
right.”’
(from Sons and Lovers,
Ch 10)
Paul’s view and mood later shifts:
‘He was brooding now,
staring out over the county from under sullen brows. The little, interesting
diversity of shapes had vanished from the scene; all that remained was a vast,
dark matrix of sorrow and tragedy, the same in all the houses and river-flats and
the people and the birds; they were only shapen differently. And now that the
forms seemed to have melted away, they remained the mass from which all the
landscape was composed, a dark mass of struggle and pain. The factory, the
girls, his mother, the large, uplifted church, the thicket of the town, merged
into one atmosphere – dark, brooding, and sorrowful, every bit.’
Nottingham Castle’s Museum held a superb DH Lawrence exhibition
in 1972. Costing over £6,000 it featured a collection of documents, photographs,
paintings, sketches, objects and other material from Lawrence’s early years in
Eastwood, Nottingham, Croydon and elsewhere, taking us from his earliest
recorded childhood to the First World War. His paintings took centre stage.
In Sons and Lovers
Paul sends a landscape to the castle’s winter exhibition. He also, to the
delight of his mother, has paintings displayed there:
And in the autumn
exhibition of students’ work in the Castle he had two studies, a landscape in
water-colour and a still life in oil, both of which had first-prize awards.
(from Sons and Lovers, Ch 8)
For decades there was a fine bust of Lawrence sculpted by
Diana Thomson in the castle’s colonnade. It was removed this year.
Castle Gate
In Sons and Lovers
Paul was walking up Castle Gate with Miriam, en route to the castle, when he met
Clara for first time. It was a street that he and his creator knew well.
When Lawrence left school in 1901 he took work as a junior
clerk with the surgical good firm Haywood’s. The 16-year-old Lawrence began his
working life here after leaving the High School. He stayed for three months at JA
Haywood’s warehouse before leaving following a bout of pneumonia and the
unexpected death of his older brother William from erysipelas. Shattered by the
death of her son, Lawrence’s mother turned her attention to her younger boy,
nursing him tirelessly and transferring to him the hopes and ambitions that she
had had for William, a dynamic that’s repeated in Sons and Lovers.
Lawrence’s factory life provides much ground for Sons and Lovers, from his older brother
writing his job application to the ribbing he received from the factory girls.
A desk from Haywood’s - where Lawrence “suffered tortures
of shyness when, at half past eight, the Factory girls from upstairs trooped
past him” – is on display at the DH Lawrence Birthplace Museum.
When Paul Morel attended his interview at Thomas Jordan’s,
Manufactures of Surgical Appliances (at 21 Spaniel Row, close to Castle Gate),
he did so with concern, not wanting to become a prisoner of industrialisation.
He dreaded the regulated, impersonal world of business and wished he were
stupid. Paul also commented that he would sooner feel extreme physical pain
than be exposed to strangers. He did, however, enjoy his day in Nottingham with his mother accompanied him. They had an adventure, visiting a bookshop and ‘big
shops’.
Before the interview:
‘It was nearly eleven
o’clock by St. Peter’s Church. They turned up a narrow street that led to the
Castle. It was gloomy and old-fashioned, having low dark shops and dark green
house doors with brass knockers, and yellow-ochred doorsteps projecting on to
the pavement; then another old shop whose small window looked like a cunning,
half-shut eye. Mother and son went cautiously, looking everywhere for “Thomas
Jordan and Son”. It was like hunting in some wild place. They were on tiptoe of
excitement.' (from Sons and Lovers, Ch 5)
After the interview, Paul and his mother walk through the
market square:
‘Over the big desolate
space of the market-place the blue sky shimmered, and the granite cobbles of
the paving glistened. Shops down Long Row were deep in obscurity, and the
shadow was full of colour. Just where the horse trams trundled across the
market was a row of fruit stalls, with fruit blazing in the sun – apples and
piles of reddish oranges, small greengage plums and bananas. There was a warm
scent of fruit as mother and son passed. Gradually his feeling of ignominy and
of rage sank.’ (from Sons and Lovers,
Ch 5)Despite the guilt Paul enjoyed the afternoon and as they headed back to the train station there was time to take in the city:
Mother and son walked down
Station Street. In Carrington Street they stopped to hang over the parapet and
looked at the barges in canal below.
“it’s just like
Venice,” he said.’ (from Sons and
Lovers, Ch 5)
The journey from Eastwood to Nottingham and back was one
that Lawrence was familiar with having taken the walk to catch the Midland Railway
to Midland Station for several years as he attended, school, work and college.
Later in the book:
‘Paul hurried off to
the station jubilant. Down derby road was a cherry-tree that glistened. The old
brick wall by the Statutes ground burned scarlet, spring was a very flame of
green. And the steep swoop of high road lay, in its cool morning dust, splendid
with patterns of sunshine and shadow, perfectly still.’ (from Sons and Lovers, Ch 6)
In The Rainbow there
are several passages set in the centre of Nottingham:
‘But at last they were away, and Brangwen went
with her into a little dark, ancient eating-house in the Bridlesmith-Gate. They
had cow's-tail soup, and meat and cabbage and potatoes. Other men, other
people, came into the dark, vaulted place, to eat. Anna was wide-eyed and
silent with wonder.’
‘Then they went into
the big market, into the corn exchange, then to shops. He bought her a little
book off a stall. He loved buying things, odd things that he thought would be
useful. Then they went to the Black Swan, and she drank milk and he brandy, and
they harnessed the horse and drove off, up the Derby Road.’
The former corn exchange is on Thurland Street. It was design
by local architect T C Hine, grandfather of the Notts novelist Muriel Hine.
Not sure about the Black Swan but it’s likely to be the
Black Swan Vaults on Goose Gate which closed in 1960 and became a Tesco.
‘She was tired out
with wonder and marvelling. But the next day, when she thought of it, she
skipped, flipping her leg in the odd dance she did, and talked the whole time
of what had happened to her, of what she had seen. It lasted her all the week.
And the next Saturday she was eager to go again.’ (from The Rainbow, Ch 3)
More central locations associated with Lawrence and his
writing:
It was at The Unitarian Chapel (now Pitcher & Piano) on
High Pavement that Paul comes across Miriam singing hymns towards the end of Sons and Lovers.
‘The large coloured
windows glowed up in the night. The church was like a great lantern suspended. They
threaded through the throng of church-people. The organ was still sounding as
St Mary’s.’
St Mary’s is easily close enough for its organ to be heard.
Sneinton
The author’s parents Arthur Lawrence and Lydia Beardsall were
married at St Stephen’s Church in Sneinton in 1875. The church is mentioned in Goose Fair, an early short story.
Ursula and Birkin are among the ‘common people’ of Sneinton
in Women in Love:
‘The old market-square
was not very large, a mere bare patch of granite setts, usually with a few
fruit-stalls under a wall. It was in a poor quarter of the town. Meagre houses
stood down one side, there was a hosiery factory, a great blank with myriad
oblong windows, at the end, a street of little shops with flagstone pavement
down the other side, and, for a crowning monument, the public baths, of new red
brick, with a clock-tower. The people who moved about seemed stumpy and sordid,
the air seemed to smell rather dirty, there was a sense of many mean streets
ramifying off into warrens of meanness. Now and again a great
chocolate-and-yellow tramcar ground round a difficult bend under the hosiery
factory.’
The ‘not very large’ market square.
‘Ursula was
superficially thrilled when she found herself out among the common people, in
the jumbled place piled with old bedding, heaps of old iron, shabby crockery in
pale lots, muffled lots of unthinkable clothing. She and Birkin went
unwillingly down the narrow aisle between the rusty wares. He was looking at
the goods, she at the people.’ (Women
in Love, Ch 26)
Highfields Park and The University of Nottingham
Highfields Park opened in 1923 on land donated by Sir Jesse
Boot who had purchased the Highfields Estate two years earlier. Later in the
decade, after the University had moved to its current University Park campus, Lawrence wrote a poem entitled Nottingham's New University to ‘commemorate’
the occasion. The poem begins:
In Nottingham, that
dismal town
where I went to school
and college,
they’ve built a new
university
for a new dispensation
of knowledge.
Built it most grand
and cakeily
out of the noble loot
derived from shrewd
cash-chemistry
by good Sir Jesse
Boot.
From Pansies
(1929)
Lakeside Arts has its DH Lawrence Pavilion, and his old
university has a life-sized bronze statue of the writer on their University
Park campus.
Suggested reading for more on Lawrence's local sense of place:
Heartlands – A Guide
to DH Lawrence’s Midlands Roots by Stephen Bailey and Chris Nottingham
(2013) Matador.