Om Women In Love
Broadly viewed as D. H. Lawrence's most prominent novel, 'Women in Love' brings to the readers the era of English society before the First World War and is a splendid inspiration for the unyielding force of human craving. 'Women in Love' is a continuation, hence, begins where ' The Rainbow' ends. The plot is developed around the third era of Brangwens- Ursula Brangwen, presently an instructor at Beldover which is a mining town in the Midlands, and her sister Gudrun, who got back from the art school in London. The focal point of the novel is fundamentally on their relationships. Ursula falls in love with Rupert Birkin, a school auditor whereas Gudrun discovers love for the industrialist, Gerald Crich, and later with a stoneworker named Loerke. Quintessentially a writing experiment, 'Women in Love' is one of Lawrence's generally exceptional, creative, and agitating works.
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