Abstract

The Lawrence Letters

Nuhn, Ferner | October 19, 1932 issue

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The article presents information about the book "The Letters of D.H. Lawrence." The letters are a revealing record of the course of a frustrated societal instinct. The condition was partly personal, but the letters show conclusively how much the debacle of Western society contributed to it. From the point of the war onward, Lawrence's life was an effort to find some surcease from the "doom of Europe." And it is notable, comparing the pre-war with the post world war II letters, how much the tone of irascibility and contrariness increased.

See Also:

LETTERS of D. H. Lawrence, The (Book); BOOKS & reading; LETTERS; FRUSTRATION; WESTERN society; EUROPE
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