As befits a book written so much out of his own life, it is the only one of his novels which we find him rethinking later. That suggests rather more of what was involved, even if (with the awareness of hindsight) Lawrence’s first word for the novel’s contents was ‘sicknesses’. But one sheds one’s sicknesses in books-repeats and presents again one’s emotions, to be master of them’ (26 x 1913). McLeod, he wrote that ‘I felt you had gone off from me a bit, because of Sons and Lovers. He could label it, quite casually, as ‘ Sons and Lovers-autobiography’ () but in a letter to the man who had once been the closest of his male friends, A. Its author also sees the situation as ‘the tragedy of thousands of young men in England’ (19 xi 1912). Sons and Lovers is not only clearly an autobiographical novel-something a number of its first readers realised without any knowledge of Lawrence’s private life-it is a book written out of a situation and a dilemma which seeks a form transforming that situation and dilemma into a novel.
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