The publication of D. H. Lawrence's novel Lady Chatterley's Lover in 1928 by an Italian publisher caused quite a scandal. The descriptions of love scenes were deemed obscene, and the work itself was perceived as a call for the destruction of the institution of marriage. Puritan society in England believed that the novel mocked the social structure and institutions of society and imposed alien, incorrect concepts of freedom, morality, and relationships between people. The complete author's version of Lady Chatterley's Lover was published in Great Britain, Lawrence's homeland, only thirty years after the writer's death, in 1960.
A beautiful young woman, Constance Chatterley, is unhappy with her husband, a disabled man who returned from the war, who is doomed to a painful existence, the impossibility of physical intimacy. She is highly sensual and femininity, living in anticipation of love, although she has platonic feelings for her husband. A chance encounter with her husband's gamekeeper, Oliver Mellors, develops into a whirlwind romance...
Perhaps, after reading this work, you will think that you have never seen a more beautiful description of love.








