Odour of Chrysanthemums
Written by D. H. Lawrence
Narrated by Cathy Dobson
3.5/5
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About this audiobook
D. H. Lawrence
David Herbert Lawrence was born on 11th September 1881 in Eastwood, a small mining village in Nottinghamshire, in the English Midlands. Despite ill health as a child and a comparatively disadvantageous position in society, he became a teacher in 1908, and took up a post in a school in Croydon, south of London. His first novel, The White Peacock, was published in 1911, and from then until his death he wrote feverishly, producing poetry, novels, essays, plays travel books and short stories, while travelling around the world, settling for periods in Italy, New Mexico and Mexico. He married Frieda Weekley in 1914 and died of tuberculosis in 1930.
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Reviews for Odour of Chrysanthemums
19 ratings1 review
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5This is the first piece of writing by D.H. Lawrence I’ve read. We’re introduced to a woman, Elizabeth Bates, and her little son, John, and Elizabeth’s father, who is an engine-driver. The woman’s husband, Walter, is a miner; he is fond of the drink, and spends a lot of money at the pub. At this particular time, the miners are coming home, but Walter has not come home yet, and they have too wait for him before they can have tea. Elizabeth suspects Walter of slinking past his door to go to the pub. So the mother, John and the little girl, Annie, who has now come home from school, wait and wait for their husband and father. They begin to eat. Elizabeth becomes more and more resentful about her husband’s lateness. She is expecting another child. Annie is enamoured of the chrysanthemums her mother has in her apron band. It is twenty to six and Walter hasn’t come home. Elizabeth is angry now. She says “What a fool I’ve been! The children were put to bed. Now Elizabeth’s anger is “tinged with fear”. A neighbour’s husband tells Elizabeth he doesn’t know where Walter is, but he’s not in the “Prince of Wales”, the pub. Walter’s elderly mother arrives in her black bonnet and black shawl. She tells her that Walt has had an accident.. Two men came with Walter on a stretcher – he is dead. One of the men knocks off a vase of chrysanthemums. “There is a deathly smell of chrysanthemums in the room.” Elizabeth feels she has nothing to do with Walter. She tries to get some connection to him, but cannot.“The wife felt the utter isolation of the human soul.” ”Life with its smoky, burning gone from him, had left him apart and utterly alien to her.” She now knows what a stranger he was to her. She sees he was a “separate stranger with whom she had been living as one flesh.” There had been nothing between them though they repeatedly had had marital relations. They had been far apart, just as they were now he was dead. She saw now that she had never seen him for what he was, and he had never seen her for what she was. She was grateful to death which “restored the truth”. For the first time she had empathy and compassion for him. She now knew how awful it had been to be a wife, and how awful it must have felt to him to be a husband. If they met in the next world, he would be a stranger to her. The children did not unite them. Eternally, he had nothing more to do with her. “Now he had withdrawn.” I take this to mean that he had voluntarily left his life. I’m not sure what Lawrence totally means by his description of Elizabeth’s insight. As I understand it, they had not been really meant for each other and should not have married, since they were so different. Now, at any rate, they had nothing to do with each other. But I feel Lawrence is contradicting himself; because though she now feels they were so different and separate beings, she still for the first time feels empathy for him. The final sentence is: “From death, her ultimate master, she winced with fear and shame.” Why was she fearful and shameful? I cannot see the need for fear; is she shameful because she did not previously see him as he really was? And what does she mean by this? Re the title, in some European countries, chrysanthemums are only given in time of mourning. Elizabeth had previously received them when she married Walter, and the first time they brought Walter home drunk he had chrysanthemums in his button-hole. So this is perhaps why the author uses the word ”odour”” instead of the usual word “scent”. I didn’t quite understand this story, but Elizabeth’s insight is its crucial part. I did not previously realize what a gifted writer D.H. Lawrence was.