
The Trespasser is an early novel by D. H. Lawrence about desire, emotional risk, artistic sensitivity, and the painful consequences of transgression. The story follows a man caught between ordinary responsibilities and a passionate relationship that promises escape but also exposes weakness and self-deception. Lawrence's attention falls on mood, bodily feeling, and psychological pressure.
The Trespasser shows many concerns that would become central to D. H. Lawrence's fiction: the conflict between social convention and instinct, the danger of romantic idealization, and the loneliness inside intimacy. Readers interested in early modernist fiction, doomed love, moral unease, and Lawrence's development as a novelist will find a searching, melancholy, and revealing work about passion's cost and emotional exile.
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