10 Broad Walk, Buxton.—Comments on the presentation of spiritual union between men and women in fiction.
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Transcript
10. Broad Walk | Buxton
Oct 10. 1917.
Dear Mrs. Pethick Lawrence
Thank you for your fine letter. It’s a most awfully intricate and difficult subject, and maddening to make clear by letter. Poetry is such a different medium that I think it does not serve for analogy; and Rolland I don’t care for (unfashionable as that is). Do you know of any figure in fiction stretched to full spiritual growth, in any setting but that of tragedy. The nearest approach I know to the presentation of full spiritual union between man & woman in real art is Pierre & Natasha in Tolstoi’s War & Peace; and how very flat the ending of that great book is! The same may be said of Levin & Kitty in ‘Anna Karenin’! {1}
Henry James tried it in ‘A Portrait of a Lady’ but he left an ending which may be read either way; &, whichever way you read, it tells us nothing. Full spiritual development in happiness seems fated to be anti-climaxic, I suppose because it means Nirvana of which nothing can be said.
Some day we’ll talk about it perhaps.
Yours very sincerely
John Galsworthy
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{1} Closing inverted comma supplied.
Beach Hotel, Littlehampton.—Thanks her and her husband for their sympathetic letters (on his refusal of a knighthood).
Manor House, Broadwindsor, Dorset - staying with Jourdains, acquired two John etchings in London, one a present from Rupert Brooke, Ka Cox and others, met Galsworthy who was "desperately in earnest on every subject", A E Housman was 'dreadfully commonplace', dance at Vicarage, hopes Charlie will visit.