The Selected Letters of D. H. LawrenceCambridge University Press, 1997 - 524 頁 D.H. Lawrence's renowned creativity is conspicuous in his letters. He wrote to aristocrats, fellow authors, painters, publishers, and others from the intelligentsia--but with equal concern to his sisters, a childhood friend suffering from tuberculosis, a post office clerk or an Italian servant-girl. Lawrence reveled in the act of communication, using a direct, unvarnished but invariably vivid style appropriate to each correspondent. In this book, over 330 of Lawrence's letters, carefully chosen from the authoritative seven-volume Cambridge Edition exemplify Lawrence's artistry and humanness. In his introductory essay James T. Boulton provides a rare critical assessment of Lawrence's epistolary achievement. There are annotations to the letters, a biographical list of correspondents, brief chronological and descriptive introductions to each section and a full general index. This selection will appeal to Lawrence aficionados and will make good companion reading to his works. |
搜尋書籍內容
第 1 到 5 筆結果,共 33 筆
... natural world as well as to the human condition - and much besides . Few English letter - writers offer a comparable range of interest . In his introductory essay James Boulton provides a rare critical assessment of Lawrence's ...
第 xxviii 頁
... natural , so that a relationship is established with the correspondent comparable to that in a private conversation . This requires intelligence , knowledge of the correspondent's personality and experience , and sensitive understanding ...
... natural , so that a relationship is established with the correspondent comparable to that in a private conversation . This requires intelligence , knowledge of the correspondent's personality and experience , and sensitive understanding ...
... naturally from a preceding remark about Heinemann , ' may his name be used as a curse and an eternal infamy ' ; what ... natural embodiment of maternity - and our protecting spirit , our household genius . But you know well the depth of ...
第 xxxiii 頁
... natural or animal world was not of equal interest . This is where the contrast with Lawrence is sharpest . Inevitably Byron's nonchalance , detachment and what Lawrence called ' ineffable conceit ' ( p . 387 ) were alien to the miner's ...
... natural or animal world was not of equal interest . This is where the contrast with Lawrence is sharpest . Inevitably Byron's nonchalance , detachment and what Lawrence called ' ineffable conceit ' ( p . 387 ) were alien to the miner's ...
第 xxxiv 頁
... natural objects , while simultaneously conveying his own delighted astonishment at their beauty . A passage such as this is reminiscent of the journals of Gerard Manley Hopkins . Beyond Byron , too , is Lawrence's range of response to ...
... natural objects , while simultaneously conveying his own delighted astonishment at their beauty . A passage such as this is reminiscent of the journals of Gerard Manley Hopkins . Beyond Byron , too , is Lawrence's range of response to ...
內容
The Formative Years 18851913 | 1 |
61 | |
Cornwall and Italy 19161921 | 139 |
Eastwards to the New World 19211924 | 215 |
New Mexico Mexico and Italy 19241927 | 271 |
其他版本 - 查看全部
常見字詞
Achsah Aldous American anyhow April Asquith Baden Bandol beautiful believe Brett Brewster Capri Catherine Carswell Christmas cold coming copy D. H. Lawrence Dear DHL's Eastwood England English Etruscan everything feel Florence Fontana Vecchia Frieda Garnett Germany give glad gone hate hope Hotel Huxley Irschenhausen Italy John Middleton Murry Katherine Mansfield Lady Chatterley's Lover Lady Cynthia Asquith Lady Ottoline Lawrence's leave letter live London look Mabel Maria Mexico mother Mountsier Murry never nice novel one's Orioli paint perhaps poems published Rainbow ranch Scandicci Secker seems Seltzer sister Sons and Lovers sort soul stay story suppose Taormina Taos tell thank there's things Tregerthen Villa Mirenda week Weekley wish woman Women in Love wonder write wrote yesterday York Zennor
熱門章節
第 xxxv 頁 - Alas! they had been friends in youth; But whispering tongues can poison truth; And constancy lives in realms above; And life is thorny; and youth is vain; And to be wroth with one we love Doth work like madness in the brain.