David Herbert Lawrence

the shed, working silent in the soaking rain.

The body bent forward towards the earth, closing round on itself; the

arms clasped full of hay, clasped round the hay that presses soft and

close to the breast and the body, that pricks heat into the arms and the

skin of the breast, and fills the lungs with the sleepy scent of dried

herbs: the rain that falls heavily and wets the shoulders, so that the

shirt clings to the hot, firm skin and the rain comes with heavy,

pleasant coldness on the active flesh, running in a trickle down towards

the loins, secretly; this is the peasant, this hot welter of physical

sensation. And it is all intoxicating. It is intoxicating almost like a

soporific, like a sensuous drug, to gather the burden to one's body in

the rain, to stumble across the living grass to the shed, to relieve

one's arms of the weight, to throw down the hay on to the heap, to feel

light and free in the dry shed, then to return again into the chill,

hard rain, to stoop again under the rain, and rise to return again with

the burden.

It is this, this endless heat and rousedness of physical sensation which

keeps the body full and potent, and flushes the mind with a blood heat,

a blood sleep. And this sleep, this heat of physical experience, becomes

at length a bondage, at last a crucifixion. It is the life and the

fulfilment of the peasant, this flow of sensuous experience. But at last

it drives him almost mad, because he cannot escape.

For overhead there is always the strange radiance of the mountains,

there is the mystery of the icy river rushing through its pink shoals

into the darkness of the pine-woods, there is always the faint tang of

ice on the air, and the rush of hoarse-sounding water.

And the ice and the upper radiance of snow are brilliant with timeless

immunity from the flux and the warmth of life. Overhead they transcend

all life, all the soft, moist fire of the blood. So that a man must

needs live under the radiance of his own negation.

There is a strange, clear beauty of form about the men of the Bavarian

highlands, about both men and women. They are large and clear and

handsome in form, with blue eyes very keen, the pupil small, tightened,

the iris keen, like sharp light shining on blue ice. Their large,

full-moulded limbs and erect bodies are distinct, separate, as if they

were perfectly chiselled out of the stuff of life, static, cut off.

Where they are everything is set back, as in a clear frosty air.

Their beauty is almost this, this strange, clean-cut isolation, as if

each one of them would isolate himself still further and for ever from

the rest of his fellows.

Yet they are convivial, they are almost the only race with the souls of

artists. Still they act the mystery plays with instinctive fullness of

interpretation, they sing strangely in the mountain fields, they love

make-belief and mummery, their processions and religious festivals are

profoundly impressive, solemn, and rapt.

It is a race that moves on the poles of mystic sensual delight. Every

gesture is a gesture from the blood, every expression is a symbolic

utterance.

For learning there is sensuous experience, for thought there is myth and

drama and dancing and singing. Everything is of the blood, of the

senses. There is no mind. The mind is a suffusion of physical heat, it

is not separated, it is kept submerged.

At the same time, always, overhead, there is the eternal, negative

radiance of the snows. Beneath is life, the hot jet of the blood playing

elaborately. But above is the radiance of changeless not-being. And life

passes away into this changeless radiance. Summer and the prolific

blue-and-white flowering of the earth goes by, with the labour and the

ecstasy of man, disappears, and is gone into brilliance that hovers

overhead, the radiant cold which waits to receive back again all that

which has passed for the moment into being.

The issue is too much revealed. It leaves the peasant no choice. The

fate gleams transcendent above him, the brightness of eternal,

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