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... Rather than improving these circumstances through revolution, Lawrence suggests in Daughters of the Vicar that they can be overcome if individuals have the courage to rise above these conditions via internal determination. ...
Lawrences philosophy before the Great War, and around the time he wrote Daughters of the Vicar, is most apparent in the metaphysical contents of his Foreword to Sons and Lovers, which was expanded on in Study of Thomas Hardy. ... Whilst Daughters of the Vicar is not an illustration of a prescriptive philosophy, Lawrences metaphysic provides the story with a unity of purpose as all the characters operate within the boundaries of an energy that is more powerful than all the facets of mans existence on which man prides himself: consciousness; will; the production of laws, useful objects, works of art, and so on.
Approximate Word count = 383 Approximate Pages = 1.5 (250 words per page double spaced)
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