Hardy's female sex is far from crazy crowds and virginity of Lawrence, and gypsy lawns are really sexual liberals. In his novel, does he give more independence to women or does it gain more freedom within the intended expectations? Thomas Hardy can ask the same question and some critics like Rosemary Morgan believe that women's sexuality is used in a revolutionary and controversial revolutionary way ing.
After the death of David Herbert Lawrence in 1930, a novel "The Madonna and the Gypsy" was discovered in France. Madonna and Gypsy are thought to be Lawrence soon to refine and purify his masterpiece on sexuality and morality, become a classic, one of Lawrence 's most exciting short stories. In this book, Lawrence explains a young girl, a virgin's desire, usually a top-level form, with a slight change. Her point of view for the future is to maintain a peaceful marriage relationship with local young people and money boys enthusiastic about getting something else before their fate. She discovered this love by chance.
Virgin of Our Lady of D. H. Lawrence and D. H. Gypsy's virgin. In Lawrence and Gypsy's Madonna, the character of gypsy is easier to define than the virgin. In this novel, virginity is totally different, somewhat lacking in sexual experience, more comprehensive. We relate women to ordinary purity, but Lawrence is more closely related to purity and innocence, and purity is mutually exclusive. - ... People expect him to be a humble person and a pious person, but he will make people pay for people to hear their confession. "So, you should not cry to cry or pray, but you should provide money for caring for poor talent" (p. 103, pp. 235-235). He can convince a woman to put his last penny in his hand. He will tell her any lies earning money for the "church" (his own). Flair's greed has made him unable to see the selfishness behind his behavioral thoughts.
Similarly, the story of D. H. Lawrence's "The Madonna and the Gypsies" includes topics such as life, social change, patriarchal lifestyle, and sexuality. Its settings and characters can also be used in Jane Austen's novels, but the profound psychological and emotional analysis of the situation in Lawrence makes it completely different. It is a story of a young woman named Yvette, a rural pastor's daughter that is tightly integrated with society. Her mother quit her father and turned to another young man, so his father was painful, frustrated and became strict. They live with her sister, grandmother and aunt who share the traditional ambition. I feel that the primitive man Yvette and its sisters are always suppressed in this closed life. But they are energetic, young and energetic women and they do not seem to be wrapped in dark clouds of families to some extent.