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A text can represent something by way of a setting. Objects,
creatures or even people, can be used to intimate or directly
refer to something other than their face value. Also, the
interactions between people themselves can suggest even where it
does not directly display something. Lawrence appears to use all
of these means of representation in the story of The
Fox(1), and gives the impression of
doing so very consciously.
A setting is something like a stage backdrop, which can
immediately, and without any word from the characters, tell us
whether it is night or day, safe or dangerous, abroad or near at
hand. In The Fox the backdrop has several layers. First to
be presented is the farm and the animals, then later the World War
and the army camp.
In introducing the reader to the farm, Lawrence carefully puts
details into this setting. He tells us that March and Banford, in
connection with the chickens kept were disgusted at the
chickens tendency to strange illnesses, at their exacting way of
life, and at their refusal, obstinate refusal to lay eggs.
And regarding two cows, Lawrence says, Then, just before the
other beast was expecting her first calf, the old man died, and
the girls, afraid of the coming event, sold her in a panic.
Because the women had already been described as unmarried,
childless, and living without male company, the female animals,
and the comments about them, suggest particular qualities in the
two women themselves. They represent or suggest a rather seedy,
neurotic and non-productive aspect of womanhood behind the capable
exterior. The dispatch of the cow prior to delivering its calf
adds the idea of anxiety in dealing with birth and responsibility
for offspring. Lawrence gives us a clue this may refer to March in
particular by saying, Her mouth, too, was almost pinched as
if in pain and irony. There was something odd and unexplained
about her. This idea of her strangeness is deepened later by
descriptions of her lapsing into this odd, rapt state, her
mouth rather screwed up. It was a question whether she was there,
actually conscious present, or not.
So altogether the farm and its animals seem to represent a
distinctly female situation, along with anxieties about
difficulties that may attend the function of childbirth. This
added to the relationship of the women living alone, may even
point to something Lawrence doesnt say directly, but
portrays in events, that there may be a difficulty in relating to
men as sexual partners. This I will deal with more fully later.
Into this portrayal of a very female environment, and into the
lives of the two women themselves comes the fox. Apart from two
old and fatherly men Banfords father and the
grandfather who died this is the first potent male figure
in the story. We are assured of its gender in the first mention of
it Since the war the fox was a demon. He carried off
the hens under the very noses of March and Banford.
The fox signifies something that touches March deeply. Through
its sly impudent and exasperating manner,
it becomes a focus for March of urges and feelings which arise in
her, placing her on a borderline at once exciting and dangerously
unknown. The dangerous unknown is maleness outside of her own
self. The fox depicts a male-related sexual relationship. This
gradually becomes apparent as Lawrence describes the appearance of
Henry, and shows how March sees, even smells him as the fox
She became almost peaceful at last. He was identified with
the fox-and he was here in full presence.
She could at last
lapse into the odour of the fox. This says clearly that
through the fox the male was present but not clearly so. At Henrys
arrival however, what had been unclear was now real.
The fox as a symbol of maleness or at least Marchs
feelings about a male - has the same beauty many symbols have.
They awaken us, they frighten us, they suggest strange and
wonderful things, but they are never themselves the things they
represent. They are wonderfully ambiguous. We can therefore remain
slightly distant from the reality.
So in hunting the fox, March is hunting the male. Or at least
she is hunting her own feelings, her consciousness held back
as Lawrence puts it. This act is depicting once more something
other than itself Marchs sexuality and her manner of
dealing with it. Does she want to kill it? Or does she wish it to
live? She is herself uncertain. When she confronts it in the fox
she doesnt even raise her gun till it has casually run away.
It is Henry who kills the fox, and if Lawrence is using the
creature to represent Marchs barely allowed sexual desires,
her fantasy of a relationship with a male, then Henry kills this,
confronting her with the reality of his desire for her.
Coming more directly to March and Banford, they too may be
representations. As characters in dramas so often do, they can be
seen to depict different character types. Banford is a more
traditional female, frail and needing someone else to care for
her, to sympathise with her weakness and needs. She at first has a
sisterly relationship with the male - Henry - who appears. March
is described as the one who would be the man about the
place. Gradually she emerges as a woman who has developed
greater self sufficiency than Banford, someone who has female
warmth and longings, but can also make her own decisions without
depending on a male in what had been the traditional female role.
So these two women can be seen as representatives of two aspects
of character that many a woman found perhaps competing in herself,
during and after the first world war. Through earning her own
wage, making her own decisions while the husband was away, not
simply in the home, but in the environment of work and business, a
woman might find herself in conflict. The attitudes and responses
she had unconsciously learnt in childhood about being a woman,
could be at variance with the new person she was becoming.
Therefore the two women are not only of a particular gender, but
they also represent different conditions of gender at the time of
the story.
If we accept this, the relationship between Henry Grenfel and
the two women can be seen as the working out, the portrayal, of a
traditional male female relationship within a new social and
economic setting. To emphasise what this might do in ones
personality Lawrence makes much use of the process of sleep and
fighting to stay awake as an image of the competing drives. The
following sentences capture this - March looked back from
the door. 'Jill!' she cried in a frantic tone, like someone just
coming awake. And she seemed to start towards her darling. But the
boy had March's arm in his grip, and she could not move. She did
not know why she could not move. It was as in a dream
.
The struggle between staying awake and falling asleep is
depicted as the swing between Banford and Henry, between being a
traditional or a new woman. But Lawrence uses this imagery to
refer to Henry also. For instance in a passage where Henry first
kisses March, Lawrence writes, When the curious passion
began to die down, he seemed to come awake to the world.
Then in the same paragraph the description turns to March and
says, It made her feel so young, too, and frightened, and
wondering: and tired, tired, as if she were going to sleep.
At the end of the text the image of sleep is played strongly, with
emphasis on what it depicts He wanted her to commit
herself to him, and to put her independent spirit to sleep.
In attempting to fit these various parts together, the three way
relationship stands out as representative of the difficulties and
conflicts faced when a woman of that time developed a new
independence. This new self is symbolised by being awake or waking
up. March only feels sleep claiming her when she starts to be
drawn into a traditional male/female relationship with Henry, or
symbolically with the fox. Henry kills both the fox and Banford
because they are escape routes for March. The fox was an escape
into fantasy, and Banford was an escape into a traditional
male/female role March playing the psychological male. As
the drama focuses fully on March and Henry, the imagery of sleep
is used to depict March attempting to stay awake - to keep hold of
her newly found ability to think for herself and remain
independent of the sort of emotional, physical and social ties
marriage at that time involved many women in. To remain awake
becomes imperative. That Grenfel chose March suggests he too wants
something more than a woman like Banford.
Lawrence therefore appears to be dramatising the situation many
women and men faced at that period, or were about to face. The
message is that a woman would need to remain alert against falling
asleep dropping back into the attitudes and
responses so ready-made for her. The man would need to remain
aware of his own unconscious drive to have the woman yield
and sleep in him for Henry too fell asleep into
his passion for March.
If this alertness were not attended to, conflict would result. I
therefore conclude that Lawrence was well aware of this emerging
problem, and that he used not only the images of the farm, the
farm animals and the fox to depict it, but also the characters of
the people involved, and the powerful influence of sleep to take
away resolve and awareness when it is most needed.
(1)
D. H. LAWRENCE - Short Stories -Selected and introduced
by Stephen Gill, Lincoln College, Oxford. Published by J.
M. Dent & Sons Ltd, London, EVERYMAN'S LIBRARY. 1992. ISBN 0
460 87127 7.

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