Abstract

D. H. Lawrence

Krutch, Joseph Wood | March 19, 1930 issue

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On March 3 D. H. Lawrence died of tuberculosis in a villa near Nice. His death, at the age of forty-five, extinguishes a talent that was one of the most varied and stormy in contemporary literature. Throughout his career Lawrence was the subject of acrimonious controversy and the victim of much persecution, both political and literary. A professed pacifist and the husband of the former Frieda von Richthofen, he was hounded by secret police during the war and he became, besides, the object of persistent hostility on the part of the censors.

See Also:

LITERATURE; LAWRENCE, D. H. (David Herbert), 1885-1930; PERSECUTION; WAR; CENSORSHIP; PACIFISTS -- United States; UNITED States
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