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  1. When she marries Clifford Chatterley, a minor nobleman, Constanceor, as she is known throughout the novel, Connie—assumes his title, becoming Lady Chatterley. Lady Chatterley's Lover chronicles Connie's maturation as a woman and as a sensual being.

  2. Dec 15, 2022 · Lady Chatterley’s Lover ending explained in detail: Why did Clifford and Constance move away from London? After suffering a dreadful war injury, Clifford takes on a more melancholy appearance and begins to use a wheelchair.

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  4. A well-educated young woman in her mid-twenties, Connie had married Sir Clifford Chatterley in 1917 when he was on leave from the army and then tried to remain cheerful and encouraging during...

  5. While war raged on, Hilda tied the knot with an older man, and Constance fell for and married Clifford Chatterley, a soft-spoken member of England’s aristocracy. Now, the war is over, and Constance and Clifford have settled in Wragby Hall, the Chatterley’s mansion in the English Midlands .

  6. Mrs. Bolton's husband was a coal-miner who died in the mines owned by Clifford's family. She thus resents him as an oppressor and an industrialist, a member of the upper class, but, at the same time, however, she worships his wealth and nobility.

  7. Sir Clifford Chatterley is Constance ’s husband, Sir Geoffrey ’s son, and Emma Chatterley ’s younger brother. After his father dies, Clifford inherits his father’s baronet status (making him a low-ranking member of the British aristocracy) and Wragby Hall, the family’s large Midlands estate.

  8. Lady Chatterley's Lover begins with the marriage of Clifford Chatterley, a young baronet, to Constance Reid. Clifford is the heir to an estate, Wragby, in the English midlands; Constance—or Connie, as she is usually called in this novel—is the cultured, intellectual daughter of a Scottish painter, Sir Malcolm.