In the early spring of 1912, at the age of 27, Lawrence ended another love affair that "made him extremely dissatisfied", and in the early summer he came to Germany "with a very heavy heart" and was introduced by an acquaintance to Professor Vickery of the University of Nottingham. In England at the time, words such as "professor" and "poet" were mainly used to mock and insult others. Professor Wickley had a high reputation in the school, and he wanted to use Professor Wickley's connections to get himself a position as an English lecturer. Professor Wickley's wife, Frida, was the daughter of a German aristocrat and was "beautiful, lazy, and energetic".
Frida is a full-time wife who takes care of her three lovely children and occasionally flirts with seemingly pleasing students, but not beyond the bounds. Lawrence came to Professor Wickley's house every three to five minutes to rub rice and play with the three children, and Frida looked at them tenderly on the side, "Suddenly I found that I loved him, and he touched a new tenderness in my heart." Lawrence later recalled that Frida fell in love with him "only because she never got the satisfaction of love [in Professor Wickley]" and that he "promised her a new world."
To put it bluntly: Frida, a 37-year-old woman who is "healthy, powerful, charming and beautiful", lives a dull and lonely life with her uninteresting husband who only knows how to bury his head in learning, and there is a fire hidden in his heart, and Lawrence lights this fire.
They progressed rapidly. One day, Professor Vicley was out on a trip, and Frida asked Lawrence to spend the night with her. Lawrence refused, saying solemnly, "No," "Your husband is not here, I won't stay in your house, but you must tell him the truth, and we are going to leave together because I love you."
Frida listened to Lawrence's advice, showed off with her husband, and then the two of them came to Frida's hometown and told Frida's father about the matter, leaving her famous husband and three children and following the son of an unemployed miner who was unknown to the world. Unsurprisingly, Frida's father admonished his daughter to turn back to the shore and tell her in a serious tone, "I know the world," and you did so no differently than the waitress in a bar. But Frida retorted to her father, saying, "You never knew what was best."
Under the objection of the old father, the two had to be separated temporarily. Lawrence kept writing to Frida, "I love you, I can't say anything until I say this," "In my (later) sporadic daily life, your will is my will." He also wrote to Professor Wickley, hoping that he would "cut his love generously", but Professor Wickley refused to budge and wanted to fight for everything.
Lawrence said to Frida, "I really love you, and I'm starting to feel like A man in the world." I think I still have to be immoral about waiting for someone else's wife like this." "Your jaw is so charming", "We must fight with life, we must always help each other, never go to war with each other".
Like all useless scumbags, except for the sweet talk of the Sea Oath Mountain Alliance, he does not have the same bubble girl capital that can be taken.
He wrote a poem: You are the call, I am the answer; you are the wish, I am the fulfillment; you are the day, I am the night. What else do you want? It's perfect enough, it's perfect. You and I, nothing else.

Waiting is painful. Lawrence told his friend that he was "so anxious" that he even looked at several scalpers with huge heads and seemed to be sleeping all the time, "almost driven mad."
Under Lawrence's incessant bombardment, the wobbly Frida finally made up his mind to fight the fire, abandoned his husband and daughter, and came to date Lawrence, happy love made Lawrence fall in love with the whole world, he loved the red and white flowers full of pear trees, the petals that fell on the breakfast table outdoors; loved the light green water, flowing crisp and fast, the quiet valley and fragrant wildflowers made him cry with joy. He said that Frida was astonishingly beautiful, "wonderful, beautiful, and so good to look beyond the wildest imagination of all."
Frida, who likes to sit barefoot in her pajamas and eat breakfast on the balcony, says to Lawrence, "There's something in you that's destroying me," "I don't want anything, I just want to immerse myself in the new world you gave me, and I find that I get everything I need, like a little fish swimming in a small river, a daisy blooming in the sun." Lawrence said that when Frida bathed, she was "like a rotten Dijon rose" and "swayed on the shallow water, barely able to float."
They became experienced travelers, wandering through different beautiful villages, living primitive lives, and the advantage of this "Spartan" simplicity was that even if people discovered their illegal relationships, they would not be rumored and would not be afraid of the very few literary lovers who came to ask Lawrence how to write. The two "embraced each other excitedly at the thought of having their own home" and were ecstatic at the sight of "beautiful copper pans in the kitchen." Simply "so happy".
Miss Frida was born into an aristocratic family, could not do housework, could not cook, and had no ability to live, but Lawrence was a good hand. Whenever Lawrence concentrates on writing, he can hear Frida shouting melancholy in the kitchen, Lawrence, the pigeon meat is burned, what to do? Lawrence immediately dropped the work in his hand and rushed to the kitchen to help her solve it.
Lawrence got up at eight o'clock every morning to make breakfast for Frida, who always slept until noon and always asked Lawrence to chat and talk with her. In the afternoon or evening, the two go for a walk by the lake together, enjoying the beautiful scenery of the lake and mountains.
Lawrence said happily: "Once you understand the true meaning of love, there will be no more disappointments in your world, let alone despair." Even if the sky spilled down like a shattered plate, it wouldn't separate me from Frida. I will work with my life and uphold the love of men and women."
In 1927, Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence lived in a beautiful country house surrounded by pine and olive trees. The villa is built in the middle of a vineyard with a beautiful view. The girls sang and cut corn with scythes, and bales of wheat lay like sleeping people in the hot field all afternoon.
It was in this semi-reclusive country life that Lawrence wrote his last novel, Madame Chatterley's Lover. It is a very distinctive novel and has become one of the most controversial novels. Cities that have been heavily polluted by industrialization, he said, "have no natural beauty at all, no joy at all, the instinct of birds and beasts to pursue beauty has disappeared, and the complete loss of people's intuitive abilities is shocking." "Everywhere you go, it's ugly, and the jarring cinema is disgusting."
In this novel, Lawrence imagines a world in which "a new tenderness of love" between a man and a woman makes such mutilations and misfortunes no longer occur. He firmly believed that "industrialism means that human beings are enslaved and depraved".
It was a fairly long work, and Lawrence wrote it three times, but because of the heavy tuberculosis, he could only write it intermittently. In this book, he expresses his love for his wife, Frida.
After writing, he painted a large and exquisite painting: Adam and the angel quarreled at the gate of the Garden of Eden, and Eve's attendant hid in the Garden of Eden again.
The story of Adam and Eve is known to everyone. God first created Adam, and Adam said, I am alone in the world, I am lonely, I am lonely. God then put Eve to sleep, took a rib from Adam, and created another man, Eve.
God and the two men said that they could enter anywhere in heaven, but not in the Garden of Eden. But the two men were tempted by the serpent, sneaked into the Garden of Eden, ate the apples in the garden, opened their eyes, and understood shame. God thundered and raged, and sent them down to mortality, toiling. He also punished the snake for eating soil for the rest of his life and walking with his body.
Lawrence's paintings continue the story. Adam and Eve went to heaven again and wanted to enter the Garden of Eden, but the angel who did not let the door in, Adam quarreled with the angel, and Eve took the opportunity to slip in again. Eve re-entered the Garden of Eden, but there was no Adam in the garden, but someone else.
Thus Madame Chatelet's Lover is the story of a woman and her lover. The aristocratic woman Connie (i.e., Madame Chatelet) turned her back on her knighted and knowledgeable husband and ran to the ignorant but physically strong gamekeeper, became a couple, and eventually married.
This story is a true reproduction of Frida's betrayal of her husband and defecting to Lawrence.
The book shocked the literary world with its explicitly large-scale depictions, and was commented on as: the most wicked pouring, animal nature, sewers, dirty perversion, the most filthy book in English literature, books snapped up by fallen booksellers and decadent artists, toxic geniuses, half angels and half idiots, and so on.
But there is no doubt that the love described in the book is "imagined" by Lawrence, because Lawrence is seriously ill at this time and can no longer normally assume the responsibilities of her husband.
In the face of these gushing criticisms, Lawrence began to cough up blood night after night, and he said to his friends: Patience has your soul.
In 1930, lawrence died young at the age of 45. At the last moments of his life, he muttered a prayer in a trance: Put the moonlight at my feet, let my feet bathe in the moonlight, wear moon shoes, step on the bright moonlight, and walk towards my goal.
"Mrs. Chaterley's Lover" has a far-reaching influence, Jia Pingwa's creation of "Waste Capital" is deeply inspired by this book, "Waste Capital" is known as the Chinese version of "Lady Chatelet's Lover", Chen Zhongzhong's "White Deer Plain" in Tian Xiao'e, is modeled on Mrs. Chateley's creation, Wang Xiaobo's "Golden Age" Chen Qingyang, there is the shadow of Mrs. Chatelet. Zhang Kangkang's "Being a Woman", Wei Hui's "Shanghai Baby" by Wei Hui, a female writer who claims to "write with her body", and Mian Mian's "Sugar", are all influenced by them.
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