Abstract

Throughout his works, Lawrence quarrels with what he terms in Lady Chatterley’s Lover his “tragic age” (5). He surveys the tragedy of social mutations brought about by economic and industrial changes, a tragedy he believes to have reached a climax with the outbreak of the war. He also considers his personal tragedy, which proceeds from his no longer being able to relate to a country he cared for and his decision to turn to exile. Lawrence’s ambivalent feelings for his homeland further stem fr...

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