INTRODUCTION T DH. LAWRENCE, OUR CONTEMPORARY
CHAPTER I THE DECLINE OF MANCHESTER HOUSE.
CHAPTER II THE RISE OF LINA HOUGHTON
CHAPTER III THE MATERNITY NURSE
CHAPTER IV TWO WOMEN DIE
CHAPTER V THE BEAU
CHAPTER VI HOUGHTONS LAST ENDEOUR
CHAPTER VII NATCHA-KEE-TAWARA
CHAPTER VIII CICCIO
CHAPTER IX LINA BECOMES ALLAYE
CHAPTER X THE FALL OF MANCHESTER HOUSE
CHAPTER XI HONOURABLE ENGAGEMENT
CHAPTER XII ALLAYE ALSO IS ENGAGED
CHAPTER XIII THE WEDDED WIFE
CHAPTER XIV THE JOURNEY ACROSS
CHAPTER XV THE PLACE CALLED CALIFANO
CHAPTER XVI SUSPENSE
D.H.LAWRENCE (1885-1930), one of the greatest figures in 20th-century English literature. Lawrence saw sex and intuition as ways to undistorted perception of reality and means to respond to the inhumanity of the industrial culture. From Lawrence's doctrines of sexual freedom arose obscenity trials, which had a deep effect on the relationship between literature and society.
In 1912 he wrote: "What the blood feels, and believes, and says, is always true." Lawrence's e fter World War I was marked with continuous and restless wandering.