
BY - D. H. LAWRENCE
E. ARCHER - 68, RED LION STREET, LONDON, W.C.1. - September, 1926.
A woman in late‑1920s London is urged by doctors to seek the healing power of the sun. She boards a midnight ferry with her infant son, a nurse, and her mother, while her husband watches anxiously from the deck, their marriage already strained by years of mismatched wills. The dark Hudson River swallows the ship as they head toward a foreign shore, and the journey itself becomes a quiet tableau of longing and resignation.
Arriving in a sun‑splashed Mediterranean locale, she finds a house perched on terraces of olives and lemon groves, the air scented with mimosa and the sea glinting like molten metal. Yet the bright landscape only mirrors the unrest inside her, as she feels the weight of responsibility for her child and the push‑pull of her mother’s well‑meaning but oppressive care. Seeking solitude, she discovers a rugged bluff shaded by a lone cypress and prickly‑pear cactus, where she contemplates shedding not just clothing but the lingering doubts that have kept her bound.
Language
en
Duration
~37 minutes (35K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Original publisher
United Kingdom: E. Archer, 1926.
Credits
Laura Natal Rodrigues (Images generously made available by Hathi Trust Digital Library.)
Release date
2022-04-24
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1885–1930
Best known for novels that tested the limits of what fiction could say about love, desire, and modern life, this English writer remains one of the boldest voices of the early 20th century. His work combines emotional intensity with sharp observations about class, industry, and human relationships.
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