In January 1921, D. H. Lawrence and his wife, Frieda visited Sardinia, a Mediterranean island west of Italy. Although the trip lasted only nine days, Lawrence wrote an intriguing account of Sardinian life that not only evokes the place, people, and local customs but is also deeply revealing about th ...
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Lawrence's analysis of Revelations includes not only Biblical commentary but his thoughts on democracy, relations between the sexes, and the importance of the flesh.
The first of Lawrence's memorable travel books about Italy, this 1916 volume is a very personal tour of the colorful and liberated land that he considered an antidote to the grim and passionless dreariness of his native England.
This novel is the story of Siegmund, a musician in an unhappy marriage who pursues a former pupil, Helena. He persuades Helena to accompany him on a vacation. Although she accepts his company, she fails to respond to his passion and Siegmund is left in despair. Siegmund's conflict lies in his inten ...
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