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The Pain of Love
Sons and Lovers, an early 20th century novel by the English author D. ... At one moment a character can feel complete love, and at another moment, only absolute hatred. Lawrence uses raw sentences and individually symbolic images for each character in order to convey the contradictions and the pain that makes true love so mysterious. ... These emotional jolts are used to describe deep feelings related to love. These thoughts are most commonly connected to Paul Morel, the main character who hardly realizes how ferociously he is spinning through his self-imposed, and infinitely complicated, tornado of love. When the all-knowing narrator tells about the feelings of the characters, they seem to be blatantly lumped into either love or hate, the two extremes in the spectrum of human emotion. So often in the novel these views of love are so cruel that one cannot help but feel sympathetic. The characters do not seem to view love as something beautiful, instead it is dreary and futile. Even when Miriam seems to be in love with Paul, “she never saw herself living happily through a lifetime with him.
Approximate Word count = 936 Approximate Pages = 3.7 (250 words per page double spaced)
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