The English Novel in the Twentieth Century: The Doom of Empire |
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Page 63
... Frieda met Lawrence , gone beyond his master in the direction of erotic liberation and life experiment . Frieda always kept Otto's letters to her , in which he named her the Woman of the Future , but she chose the more reliable Lawrence ...
... Frieda met Lawrence , gone beyond his master in the direction of erotic liberation and life experiment . Frieda always kept Otto's letters to her , in which he named her the Woman of the Future , but she chose the more reliable Lawrence ...
Page 64
... Frieda left England , and never returned to live there in any permanent way . They travelled to Italy , to Sicily , to Australia , to Ceylon , to America , to Mexico . Lawrence wrote prolifically , but not works of the scale and ...
... Frieda left England , and never returned to live there in any permanent way . They travelled to Italy , to Sicily , to Australia , to Ceylon , to America , to Mexico . Lawrence wrote prolifically , but not works of the scale and ...
Page 70
... Frieda does appear , and the scenes of domestic comedy between her and Lawrence are funny and charm- ing . But she ... Frieda . Only in Lady Chatterley's Lover and in the related late essays , like ' A Propos of Lady Chatterley's Lover ...
... Frieda does appear , and the scenes of domestic comedy between her and Lawrence are funny and charm- ing . But she ... Frieda . Only in Lady Chatterley's Lover and in the related late essays , like ' A Propos of Lady Chatterley's Lover ...
Contents
1 THE EMPIRE AND THE ADVENTURE | 1 |
THE EMPIRE | 16 |
THE SISTERS | 46 |
Copyright | |
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adventure Amis Amis's artist audience authority became become began begins British called caste character clearly course critics culture death described early empire England English erotic experience expressed face fact failed father feeling felt fiction figure give Golden Notebook Greene hand hero idea imagination imperialism important India instance intellectual interesting James Joyce kind Kipling Kipling's later laughter Lawrence Lessing letters literary literature lived London look major marriage matter means mind moral mother movement never novel novelists opposite passage perhaps play political presented reader relation represents responsibility says scene seems sense serious social sort Stephen story success theme things told turn Waugh woman women writers wrote York young