Meeting in the Dark Solitude and Union in D. H. Lawrences Odor of Chysanthemums and The Horse-Dealers Daughter An apparently impervious isolation pervades human life in D. H. Lawrences two short stories, Odor of Chrysanthemums and The Horse Dealers Daughter. Inside Lawrences anecdotal universes, the topical detachment of people from each other (regularly aggravated by a significant remoteness from ones own self) arranges itself as an incomprehensibly isolating yet conceivably binding together power between individuals yet right off the bat, as a completely lumbering feature of the human condition. Every one of Lawrences stories passes on the basic catastrophe of the human condition through the ever-present truth of unavoidable demise.

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