The Rainbow

by

D. H. Lawrence

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Anna Lensky/Anna Brangwen Character Analysis

Anna Lensky is the daughter of Lydia Lensky and Paul Lensky, as well as the stepdaughter of Tom Brangwen. As a child, Anna clings to her mother, although Tom eventually gets her to open up and trust him. Anna likes Tom, in part, because he is a warm, protective force who is also good with animals. Anna loves animals and spends a good deal of her time with them rather than with other people her age. As she grows older, Anna spends much of her time with Tom, traveling with him to the cattle market and existing in the world of men. For the most part, she has an utter disregard for any authority figure who is not one of her parents, though the lifestyle of Baron Skrebensky does fascinate her and makes her dream of becoming a noble lady someday. When Anna is in her late teenage years, she meets Will Brangwen, her cousin, and the two of them fall in love before eventually choosing to marry. Early on, Anna’s marriage with Will is difficult because she feels that he wants to snuff out her independence. After having several children together, including Ursula Brangwen, Anna and Will eventually sort out their marriage issues, as Anna finds contentment in her motherly duties.

Anna Lensky/Anna Brangwen Quotes in The Rainbow

The The Rainbow quotes below are all either spoken by Anna Lensky/Anna Brangwen or refer to Anna Lensky/Anna Brangwen. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
The Search for Meaning Theme Icon
).
Chapter 3: Childhood of Anna Lensky Quotes

Tom Brangwen never loved his own son as he loved his stepchild Anna. When they told him it was a boy, he had a thrill of pleasure. He liked the confirmation of fatherhood. It gave him satisfaction to know he had a son. But he felt not very much outgoing to the baby itself. He was its father, that was enough.

He was glad that his wife was mother of his child. She was serene, a little bit shadowy, as if she were transplanted. In the birth of the child she seemed to lose connection with her former self. She became now really English, really Mrs. Brangwen. Her vitality, however, seemed lowered.

Related Characters: Tom Brangwen, Anna Lensky/Anna Brangwen, Lydia Lensky/Lydia Brangwen, Tom Brangwen Jr.
Page Number: 76
Explanation and Analysis:

He did not know her any better, any more precisely, now that he knew her altogether. Poland, her husband, the war—he understood no more of this in her. He did not understand her foreign nature, half German, half Polish, nor her foreign speech. But he knew her, he knew her meaning, without understanding. What she said, what she spoke, this was a blind gesture on her part. In herself she walked strong and clear, he knew her, he saluted her, was with her. What was memory after all, but the recording of a number of possibilities which had never been fulfilled? What was Paul Lensky to her, but an unfulfilled possibility to which he, Brangwen, was the reality and the fulfilment? What did it matter, that Anna Lensky was born of Lydia and Paul? God was her father and her mother. He had passed through the married pair without fully making Himself known to them.

Related Characters: Tom Brangwen, Anna Lensky/Anna Brangwen, Lydia Lensky/Lydia Brangwen, Paul Lensky
Page Number: 90
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 4: Girlhood of Anna Brangwen Quotes

She never could tell how she knew it, but she did know that he was a knight of Malta. She could never remember whether she had seen his star, or cross, of his order or not, but it flashed in her mind, like a symbol. He at any rate represented to the child the real world, where kings and lords and princes moved and fulfilled their shining lives, whilst queens and ladies and princesses upheld the noble order.

She had recognised the Baron Skrebensky as a real person, he had had some regard for her. But when she did not see him any more, he faded and became a memory. But as a memory he was always alive to her.

Related Characters: Anna Lensky/Anna Brangwen, Baron Skrebensky
Page Number: 94
Explanation and Analysis:

Many ways she tried, of escape. She became an assiduous church-goer. But the language meant nothing to her: it seemed false. She hated to hear things expressed, put into words. Whilst the religious feelings were inside her they were passionately moving. In the mouth of the clergyman, they were false, indecent. She tried to read. But again the tedium and the sense of the falsity of the spoken word put her off. She went to stay with girl friends. At first she thought it splendid. But then the inner boredom came on, it seemed to her all nothingness. And she felt always belittled, as if never, never could she stretch her length and stride her stride.

Related Characters: Anna Lensky/Anna Brangwen, Will Brangwen
Page Number: 100
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 5: Wedding at the Marsh Quotes

How did one grow old—how could one become confident? He wished he felt older. Why, what difference was there, as far as he felt matured or completed, between him now and him at his own wedding? He might be getting married over again–he and his wife. He felt himself tiny, a little, upright figure on a plain circled round with the immense, roaring sky: he and his wife, two little, upright figures walking across this plain, whilst the heavens shimmered and roared about them. When did one come to an end? In which direction was it finished? There was no end, no finish, only this roaring vast space. Did one never get old, never die? That was the clue. He exulted strangely, with torture. He would go on with his wife, he and she like two children camping in the plains. What was sure but the endless sky? But that was so sure, so boundless.

Related Characters: Tom Brangwen, Anna Lensky/Anna Brangwen, Lydia Lensky/Lydia Brangwen, Will Brangwen
Page Number: 128
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 6: Anna Victrix Quotes

But he was strange and unused. So suddenly, everything that had been before was shed away and gone. One day, he was a bachelor, living with the world. The next day, he was with her, as remote from the world as if the two of them were buried like a seed in darkness. Suddenly, like a chestnut falling out of a burr, he was shed naked and glistening on to a soft, fecund earth, leaving behind him the hard rind of worldly knowledge and experience. He heard it in the huckster’s cries, the noise of carts, the calling of children. And it was all like the hard, shed rind, discarded. Inside, in the softness and stillness of the room, was the naked kernel, that palpitated in silent activity, absorbed in reality.

Related Characters: Anna Lensky/Anna Brangwen, Will Brangwen
Page Number: 138
Explanation and Analysis:

She bundled the dishes away, flew round and tidied the room, assumed another character, and again seated herself. He sat thinking of his carving of Eve. He loved to go over his carving in his mind, dwelling on every stroke, every line. How he loved it now! When he went back to his Creation-panel again, he would finish his Eve, tender and sparkling. It did not satisfy him yet. The Lord should labour over her in a silent passion of Creation, and Adam should be tense as if in a dream of immortality, and Eve should take form glimmeringly, shadowily, as if the Lord must wrestle with His own soul for her, yet she was a radiance.

Related Characters: Anna Lensky/Anna Brangwen, Will Brangwen
Related Symbols: The Adam and Eve Wood Carving
Page Number: 142
Explanation and Analysis:

He was not interested in the thought of himself or of her: oh, and how that irritated her! He ignored the sermon, he ignored the greatness of mankind, he did not admit the immediate importance of mankind. He did not care about himself as a human being. He did not attach any vital importance to his life in the drafting office, or his life among men. That was just merely the margin to the text. The verity was his connection with Anna and his connection with the Church, his real being lay in his dark emotional experience of the Infinite, of the Absolute. And the great mysterious, illuminated capitals to the text, were his feelings with the Church.

Related Characters: Anna Lensky/Anna Brangwen, Will Brangwen
Page Number: 151
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 7: The Cathedral Quotes

“Oh, this is good!” she cried again. “Here is the same woman—look!—only he’s made her cross! Isn’t it lovely! Hasn’t he made her hideous to a degree?” She laughed with pleasure. “Didn’t he hate her? He must have been a nice man! […] You hate to think he put his wife in your cathedral, don’t you?” she mocked, with a tinkle of profane laughter. And she laughed with malicious triumph.

She had got free from the cathedral, she had even destroyed the passion he had. She was glad. He was bitterly angry. Strive as he would, he could not keep the cathedral wonderful to him. He was disillusioned. That which had been his absolute, containing all heaven and earth, was become to him as to her, a shapely heap of dead matter–but dead, dead.

Related Characters: Anna Lensky/Anna Brangwen, Will Brangwen
Page Number: 195-196
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 8: The Child Quotes

Their children became mere offspring to them, they lived in the darkness and death of their own sensual activities. Sometimes he felt he was going mad with a sense of Absolute Beauty, perceived by him in her through his senses. It was something too much for him. And in everything, was this same, almost sinister, terrifying beauty. But in the revelations of her body through contact with his body, was the ultimate beauty, to know which was almost death in itself, and yet for the knowledge of which he would have undergone endless torture. He would have forfeited anything, anything, rather than forego his right even to the instep of her foot, and the place from which the toes radiated out, the little, miraculous white plain from which ran the little hillocks of the toes, and the folded, dimpling hollows between the toes. He felt he would have died rather than forfeit this.

Related Characters: Anna Lensky/Anna Brangwen, Will Brangwen
Related Symbols: The Adam and Eve Wood Carving
Page Number: 227
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 16: The Rainbow Quotes

Strange, what a void separated him and her. She liked him now, as she liked a memory, some bygone self. He was something of the past, finite. He was that which is known. She felt a poignant affection for him, as for that which is past. But, when she looked with her face forward, he was not. Nay, when she looked ahead, into the undiscovered land before her, what was there she could recognise but a fresh glow of light and inscrutable trees going up from the earth like smoke. It was the unknown, the unexplored, the undiscovered upon whose shore she had landed, alone, after crossing the void, the darkness which washed the New World and the Old.

There would be no child: she was glad. If there had been a child, it would have made little difference, however. She would have kept the child and herself, she would not have gone to Skrebensky. Anton belonged to the past.

Related Characters: Ursula Brangwen, Anna Lensky/Anna Brangwen, Anton Skrebensky
Page Number: 479
Explanation and Analysis:
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The Rainbow PDF

Anna Lensky/Anna Brangwen Quotes in The Rainbow

The The Rainbow quotes below are all either spoken by Anna Lensky/Anna Brangwen or refer to Anna Lensky/Anna Brangwen. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
The Search for Meaning Theme Icon
).
Chapter 3: Childhood of Anna Lensky Quotes

Tom Brangwen never loved his own son as he loved his stepchild Anna. When they told him it was a boy, he had a thrill of pleasure. He liked the confirmation of fatherhood. It gave him satisfaction to know he had a son. But he felt not very much outgoing to the baby itself. He was its father, that was enough.

He was glad that his wife was mother of his child. She was serene, a little bit shadowy, as if she were transplanted. In the birth of the child she seemed to lose connection with her former self. She became now really English, really Mrs. Brangwen. Her vitality, however, seemed lowered.

Related Characters: Tom Brangwen, Anna Lensky/Anna Brangwen, Lydia Lensky/Lydia Brangwen, Tom Brangwen Jr.
Page Number: 76
Explanation and Analysis:

He did not know her any better, any more precisely, now that he knew her altogether. Poland, her husband, the war—he understood no more of this in her. He did not understand her foreign nature, half German, half Polish, nor her foreign speech. But he knew her, he knew her meaning, without understanding. What she said, what she spoke, this was a blind gesture on her part. In herself she walked strong and clear, he knew her, he saluted her, was with her. What was memory after all, but the recording of a number of possibilities which had never been fulfilled? What was Paul Lensky to her, but an unfulfilled possibility to which he, Brangwen, was the reality and the fulfilment? What did it matter, that Anna Lensky was born of Lydia and Paul? God was her father and her mother. He had passed through the married pair without fully making Himself known to them.

Related Characters: Tom Brangwen, Anna Lensky/Anna Brangwen, Lydia Lensky/Lydia Brangwen, Paul Lensky
Page Number: 90
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 4: Girlhood of Anna Brangwen Quotes

She never could tell how she knew it, but she did know that he was a knight of Malta. She could never remember whether she had seen his star, or cross, of his order or not, but it flashed in her mind, like a symbol. He at any rate represented to the child the real world, where kings and lords and princes moved and fulfilled their shining lives, whilst queens and ladies and princesses upheld the noble order.

She had recognised the Baron Skrebensky as a real person, he had had some regard for her. But when she did not see him any more, he faded and became a memory. But as a memory he was always alive to her.

Related Characters: Anna Lensky/Anna Brangwen, Baron Skrebensky
Page Number: 94
Explanation and Analysis:

Many ways she tried, of escape. She became an assiduous church-goer. But the language meant nothing to her: it seemed false. She hated to hear things expressed, put into words. Whilst the religious feelings were inside her they were passionately moving. In the mouth of the clergyman, they were false, indecent. She tried to read. But again the tedium and the sense of the falsity of the spoken word put her off. She went to stay with girl friends. At first she thought it splendid. But then the inner boredom came on, it seemed to her all nothingness. And she felt always belittled, as if never, never could she stretch her length and stride her stride.

Related Characters: Anna Lensky/Anna Brangwen, Will Brangwen
Page Number: 100
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 5: Wedding at the Marsh Quotes

How did one grow old—how could one become confident? He wished he felt older. Why, what difference was there, as far as he felt matured or completed, between him now and him at his own wedding? He might be getting married over again–he and his wife. He felt himself tiny, a little, upright figure on a plain circled round with the immense, roaring sky: he and his wife, two little, upright figures walking across this plain, whilst the heavens shimmered and roared about them. When did one come to an end? In which direction was it finished? There was no end, no finish, only this roaring vast space. Did one never get old, never die? That was the clue. He exulted strangely, with torture. He would go on with his wife, he and she like two children camping in the plains. What was sure but the endless sky? But that was so sure, so boundless.

Related Characters: Tom Brangwen, Anna Lensky/Anna Brangwen, Lydia Lensky/Lydia Brangwen, Will Brangwen
Page Number: 128
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 6: Anna Victrix Quotes

But he was strange and unused. So suddenly, everything that had been before was shed away and gone. One day, he was a bachelor, living with the world. The next day, he was with her, as remote from the world as if the two of them were buried like a seed in darkness. Suddenly, like a chestnut falling out of a burr, he was shed naked and glistening on to a soft, fecund earth, leaving behind him the hard rind of worldly knowledge and experience. He heard it in the huckster’s cries, the noise of carts, the calling of children. And it was all like the hard, shed rind, discarded. Inside, in the softness and stillness of the room, was the naked kernel, that palpitated in silent activity, absorbed in reality.

Related Characters: Anna Lensky/Anna Brangwen, Will Brangwen
Page Number: 138
Explanation and Analysis:

She bundled the dishes away, flew round and tidied the room, assumed another character, and again seated herself. He sat thinking of his carving of Eve. He loved to go over his carving in his mind, dwelling on every stroke, every line. How he loved it now! When he went back to his Creation-panel again, he would finish his Eve, tender and sparkling. It did not satisfy him yet. The Lord should labour over her in a silent passion of Creation, and Adam should be tense as if in a dream of immortality, and Eve should take form glimmeringly, shadowily, as if the Lord must wrestle with His own soul for her, yet she was a radiance.

Related Characters: Anna Lensky/Anna Brangwen, Will Brangwen
Related Symbols: The Adam and Eve Wood Carving
Page Number: 142
Explanation and Analysis:

He was not interested in the thought of himself or of her: oh, and how that irritated her! He ignored the sermon, he ignored the greatness of mankind, he did not admit the immediate importance of mankind. He did not care about himself as a human being. He did not attach any vital importance to his life in the drafting office, or his life among men. That was just merely the margin to the text. The verity was his connection with Anna and his connection with the Church, his real being lay in his dark emotional experience of the Infinite, of the Absolute. And the great mysterious, illuminated capitals to the text, were his feelings with the Church.

Related Characters: Anna Lensky/Anna Brangwen, Will Brangwen
Page Number: 151
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 7: The Cathedral Quotes

“Oh, this is good!” she cried again. “Here is the same woman—look!—only he’s made her cross! Isn’t it lovely! Hasn’t he made her hideous to a degree?” She laughed with pleasure. “Didn’t he hate her? He must have been a nice man! […] You hate to think he put his wife in your cathedral, don’t you?” she mocked, with a tinkle of profane laughter. And she laughed with malicious triumph.

She had got free from the cathedral, she had even destroyed the passion he had. She was glad. He was bitterly angry. Strive as he would, he could not keep the cathedral wonderful to him. He was disillusioned. That which had been his absolute, containing all heaven and earth, was become to him as to her, a shapely heap of dead matter–but dead, dead.

Related Characters: Anna Lensky/Anna Brangwen, Will Brangwen
Page Number: 195-196
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 8: The Child Quotes

Their children became mere offspring to them, they lived in the darkness and death of their own sensual activities. Sometimes he felt he was going mad with a sense of Absolute Beauty, perceived by him in her through his senses. It was something too much for him. And in everything, was this same, almost sinister, terrifying beauty. But in the revelations of her body through contact with his body, was the ultimate beauty, to know which was almost death in itself, and yet for the knowledge of which he would have undergone endless torture. He would have forfeited anything, anything, rather than forego his right even to the instep of her foot, and the place from which the toes radiated out, the little, miraculous white plain from which ran the little hillocks of the toes, and the folded, dimpling hollows between the toes. He felt he would have died rather than forfeit this.

Related Characters: Anna Lensky/Anna Brangwen, Will Brangwen
Related Symbols: The Adam and Eve Wood Carving
Page Number: 227
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 16: The Rainbow Quotes

Strange, what a void separated him and her. She liked him now, as she liked a memory, some bygone self. He was something of the past, finite. He was that which is known. She felt a poignant affection for him, as for that which is past. But, when she looked with her face forward, he was not. Nay, when she looked ahead, into the undiscovered land before her, what was there she could recognise but a fresh glow of light and inscrutable trees going up from the earth like smoke. It was the unknown, the unexplored, the undiscovered upon whose shore she had landed, alone, after crossing the void, the darkness which washed the New World and the Old.

There would be no child: she was glad. If there had been a child, it would have made little difference, however. She would have kept the child and herself, she would not have gone to Skrebensky. Anton belonged to the past.

Related Characters: Ursula Brangwen, Anna Lensky/Anna Brangwen, Anton Skrebensky
Page Number: 479
Explanation and Analysis: