The White Peacock is a novel of Edward England, published in 1910-11.
The First World War is not yet even on the horizon, though in the first decade
of the twentieth century, Britain’s industrial landscape was long-formed.
and its political and social formation were already modern. Yet, throughout the
green and pleasant land, rural employment, and country ways still dominated in
many places, as Lawrence describes at length in relation to the novel’s
setting, Nethermere, a small place in Nottinghamshire.
Cyril Beardsall narrates The White Peacock. He grows up in the English
East Midlands. We know this is Nottinghamshire with occasional wanderings as
far as Derbyshire, but we never really visit any city throughout the novel.
Indeed, we are hardly ever visit the narrator, who regularly observes,
describes, but rarely opines, and never pontificates. At times, the narrator
almost seems to be living neutrally everyone else’s life in
turn.
Like the painting that inspired it, the novel is full of flowers, trees,
gardens, and woods. Lawrence’s descriptions of plants and verbiage are
themselves vaguely Pre-Raphaelite in their detail and colour. We visit farmers,
gamekeepers, several innkeepers and, at times, it seems we have to fight hard
to get through the foliage in order to release the trapped rabbit.
And of course, central to the book’s plot are the relations between men
and women, childhood friends who grew up together, exploring what the natural
world might offer them. Lettie has two admirers, George and Leslie. They are as
different as chalk and cheese, and then grow apart, live quite different lives.
As they mature, the need to earn a living rears its head above the flowers and
compromises have to be made. Marriages are struck. Lettie opts for Laslie, the
moneyed option, and George marries Meg, who is at least homely. Children are
born and lives diverge, socially, professionally and politically. Only
destinations remain similar in their hopelessness.
Lawrence depicts lives where choices have to be made, but where these
choices are often constrained by something other than passion. These
characters, predominantly the men, seem to have difficulty accepting who they
are. They seem to be pre-programmed for failure, and then cannot accept when
they feel it. The women seem to be coyer, and, as ever in Lawrence, the
suggestion is that they are essentially in control of their relations with men.
But these relations, always through marriage, produce new people whose demands
on their parents are unpredictable and change all associated lives.
Throughout, the flowers continue to bloom, and nature lives out its apparently
inevitable seasonal cycle. But for the people of the small, rural place, the idyll
lasts just moments, moments where individuals might forget who they are.
As to the identity or the thoughts of Cyril Beardsall, The White Peacock’s
narrator, we know as much by the end as we did the start. We do know, however,
that he has moved away from the midlands and now lives a very different kind of
life. I wonder who it might be.

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