
The impact of Gerald's death upon Birkin is profound. He leaves Gudrun and Loerke to climb the mountain, eventually slipping into a snowy valley where he falls asleep and freezes to death. He suddenly becomes disgusted with his actions and lets her go. Gerald, enraged by Loerke and most of all by Gudrun's verbal abuse and rejection of his manhood, and driven by his own internal violence, tries to strangle Gudrun. Gudrun begins an intense friendship with Loerke, a physically puny but emotionally commanding artist from Dresden.

The two couples take a holiday together in the Austrian Alps. Gerald and Gudrun's relationship, however, becomes stormy. After the funeral, Gerald goes to Gudrun's house and spends the night with her while her parents sleep in another room.īirkin asks Ursula to marry him, and she agrees.

Soon, Gerald's coal-mine-owning father dies as well, after a long illness. Gudrun becomes the teacher and mentor of Gerald's youngest sister. At a party at Shortlands, the Crich family's country manor home, Gerald's sister Diana drowns. Romantic relationships quickly develop as the novel progresses.Īll four are deeply concerned with questions of society, politics, and the relationship between men and women. They meet two men who live nearby, school inspector Rupert Birkin and Gerald Crich, heir to a coal mine, and the four become friends. Ursula is a schoolteacher, Gudrun a painter. Ursula and Gudrun Brangwen are sisters living in The Midlands in England in the 1910s. Ursula's character draws on Lawrence's wife Frieda and Gudrun's on Katherine Mansfield, while Rupert Birkin's has elements of Lawrence himself, and Gerald Crich is partly based on Mansfield's husband, John Middleton Murry. The novel ranges over the whole of British society before the time of the First World War and eventually concludes in the snows of the Tyrolean Alps. The emotional relationships thus established are given further depth and tension by an intense psychological and physical attraction between Gerald and Rupert.

Lawrence contrasts this pair with the love that develops between Ursula Brangwen and Rupert Birkin, an alienated intellectual who articulates many opinions associated with the author. Gudrun Brangwen, an artist, pursues a destructive relationship with Gerald Crich, an industrialist. It is a sequel to his earlier novel The Rainbow (1915) and follows the continuing loves and lives of the Brangwen sisters, Gudrun and Ursula. Women in Love (1920) is a novel by English author D.
