Joyce : James Augustine (1882-1941), Irish novelist best known for his Ulysses.
... stress and combined with the typical English note a mystic motive either directly caught from or indirectly attuned to modern renascent India. 1. THE POETIC VISION OF JOYCE CHADWICK Selected Verse 1 by Joyce Chadwick — this slender volume of nine poems I received from the author in August 1950, with six poems inscribed in ink in her own hand on the blank spaces. It confirmed the... down the far-calling strangeness lurking in familiar sights: Joyce Chadwick's is an intuitive symbolism, an immediate seizing of inner realities through concrete unela-borated emblems or emblematic gestures. Emily Dickinson seems to catch through the wide-awake intelligence's two outward-gazing eyes intense twinkles from life's depths: Joyce Chadwick is an artist of what is termed by Eastern initiates... Inspiration and Effort Two Neglected English Poets Joyce Chadwick and John A. Chadwick, contemporary with each other and belonging to our own time, are hardly heard of in English critical circles. The former died in England in 1950, the latter in India as far back as 1939; but their works have made little headway. Identical in surname, they were yet no relatives; ...
... O voice of a tilted nose, Speak but speak not in prose! Nose like a blushing rose, O Joyce of a tilted nose. This is high poetry but put it in prose and it sounds insane.' Mr. Alvares is convinced that Sri... here. But any reader can see what Sri Aurobindo is driving at. He is in one of his tomfooling moods, his warmly human bouts of humour. We have only to focus on that pun — "Joyce" — to realize the tricks the writer is up to. And, if we care to look up the context of this hilarious outburst, we shall gather at the same time how utterly... refers in a note. 85 I wrote to Sri Aurobindo: The English reader has digested Carlyle and swallowed Meredith and is not quite unwilling to re-Joyce in even more startling strangenesses of expression at the present day. Will his stomach really turn at the novelty of that phrase which you wouldn't approve; ...
... who evokes the most admiration, amazement and questions.’ 15 ‘Queen or, as she would prefer to be remembered, King Hatshepsut ruled during the 18th Dynasty Egypt for over twenty years,’ writes Joyce Tyldesley. ‘Her story is that of a remarkable woman. Born the eldest daughter of King Tuthmosis I, married to her half-brother Tuthmosis II, and guardian of her young stepson-nephew Tuthmosis III, ... Egyptians, their Pharaoh was literally a god on earth, who upheld Maat, i.e. the Dharma of the land, who made the sun rise and the river Nile come into spate, and who sustained the life of all beings. Joyce Tyldesley makes a telling comparison between Hatshepsut and Queen Elizabeth I of England, ‘a woman who inherited her throne against all odds at a time of dynastic difficulty when the royal family was... × Jean Yoyotte, in Historia , p. 2. × Joyce Tyldesley, Hatshepsut – The Female Pharaoh , p. 1. × Id., p. 118. ...
... sub-agent of the Steamer Company, a certain Sarat Babu, but, after a word from the Saheb, was told that he must accompany the aggressor to the Company's agent, with a name which the Pandit caught as Joyce. It was not, however, to the Agent, but into a first-class cabin where there were three other Europeans and two English women, that the Brahmin was dragged and the door closed behind him. No sooner... the stairs and dropped almost senseless at the bottom. His eyes were clotted with blood, but he caught a glimpse of Sarat Babu coming near him with a European whom he conjectured to be the Agent Mr. Joyce. A few words were spoken between the two. Afterwards Sarat Babu returned and told the Pandit that he Page 409 could expect no redress from the Company, but he might bring a criminal suit ...
... voice? Can't accept all that. "A voice of a devouring eye" is even more reJoycingly mad than a voice of an eye pure and simple. If the English language is to go to the dogs, let it go, but the Joyce cut by the way of Bedlam does not recommend itself to me. The poetical examples have nothing to do with the matter. Poetry is permitted to be insane—the poet and the madman go together: though even... be perfectly sane when they want. In poetry anything can pass—For instance, my "voice of a tilted nose": O voice of a tilted nose, Speak but speak not in prose! Nose like a blushing rose, O Joyce of a tilted nose! That is high poetry, but put it in prose and it sounds insane. 5 May 1935 What about this: "It is the voice of an insatiable picturesqueness ... " A voice of pict ...
... a fix for that? I use the language of the mind because there is no other which human beings can understand—even though most of them understand it badly. If I were to use a supramental language like Joyce, you would not even have the illusion of understanding; so, not being an Irishman, I don't make the attempt. But of course anyone who wants to change earth-nature must first accept it in order to change... dolorous way." As to the supramental language however the review you sent me stirs in me wild hopes. "Angelic heights throbbing with the spirit of the [vettling wingerin?]" (magnificent! let Joyce beat that [vettling wingerin?], if he can!). Arguing with "devil don't care dialectics", "[?] [?] in the midst of theories controversed and knotty self-criticism," "in spite of the bludgeon hits of ...
... Sri Aurobindo: Can't accept all that. A voice of a devouring eye is even more re-Joycingly mad than a voice of an eye pure and simple. If the English language is to go to the dogs, let it go, but the Joyce cut by the way of Bedlam does not recommend itself to me. The poetical examples have nothing to do with the matter. Poetiy is permitted to be insane - the poet and the madman go together: though... they want. In poetry anything can pass — for instance, my 'voice of a tilted nose': O voice of a tilted nose, Speak but speak not in prose! Nose like a blushing rose, O Joyce of a tilted nose! That is high poetry, but put it in prose and it sounds insane." (10) Poetry of the lower vital: AK: Here is a poem which seems to me an expression of the lower ...
... The Secret Splendour I have mastered the antinomies of Kant And the four-dimensional continuum And the daedal scheme of Joyce-wrought Ulysses— Of Dali's weird signs I am a hierophant, And how through Narcist quiverings they come I have learned by subtle psychoanalysis. Now, Lord, I pray make me most ignorant, Drown ...
... think God never made a single flowering tree For poets' babblings — but for ecstasy! This reminds me of the end of a poem by another poet, a young man who died in the First World War: Joyce Kilmer. He has a whole poem on a tree. It concludes: Poems are made by fools like me, But only God can make a tree. The same idea as Kobrin's is here, but there is in her lines the additional ...
... just now (you is not personal, but collective and indefinite) and will do less if you go blummering into buzzific intensities. (Please don't consult the dictionary, but look into the writings of Joyce and others.) 56 4.NB: When a person with few or no friends comes to see you, how to turn your face away? If any disturbance results Page 102 from it I can bear if it is helpful ...
... 257, 259-61, 267-9,274,276,.280-1,284,289-92, 297-8 Indra, 13, 22, 28, 42, 44-5, 180 Iqbal, 62n Isaiah, 118 Italy, 253 JAPAN, 228, 253 Jeanne d'Arc, 192 Jerusalem, 115, 122-3 Joyce, 88 Jouve,216-17 Judas, 120 Jung, III Juno, 182 Jupiter, 108, 180 KALI, 24n., 218 Kalidasa, 39, 85, 98, 176, 181 -Shakuntala, 162 Kant, 246 Kanwa, 162 lOIn., 162, 170, ...
... psychological states. Goethe, Wordsworth, Stendhal represented a mentality and initiated a movement which led logically to the age of Hardy, Housman and Bridges and in the end to that of Lawrence and Joyce, Ezra Pound and Eliot and Auden. On the Continent we can consider Flaubert as the last of the classicists married to the. very quintessence of Romanticism. A hard, self-regarding, self-critical mentality ...
... 331,434 IshaUpanishad 25,26,241 Iyengar, K.R. Srinivasa 29,46,415,421 Jacobi,Jolande272,273 James, William 13 Jones, Rufus M. 305,330 Joyce, James 267,428 Jung, C.G. 437 Kalidasa 46,52,340,341,374,376 Karmayogin 11-12 Kazantzakis, Nikos 330,377,398-408,436, 441,460,461 Keats ...
... just now (you is not personal, but collective and indefinite) and will do less if you go blummering into buzzific intensities. (Please don't consult the dictionary, but look into the writings of Joyce and others.) 9 April 1935 It is you who will bring down the Supramental but my question was whether that descent is quite independent of the conditions of the sadhaks; whether our impurities ...
... fix for that? I use the language of the mind because there is no other which human beings can understand,—even though most of them understand it badly. If I were to use a supramental language like Joyce, you would not even have the illusion of understanding it; so, not being an Irishman, I don't make the attempt. But of course anyone who wants to change earth-nature must first accept it in order to ...
... and struggling life That yearns in vain for rest and endless peace." 1 February 21,1950 DILIP KUMAR ROY Postscript. I gratefully acknowledge my debt to my friends, Miss Joyce Chadwic, K. D. Sethna and Professor Sisir Kumar Ghosh of Santiniketan for the help I received from them. 1 Cent. Vol. 29, Bk. VI, C. 2 Page 4 ...
... y present in these stories. THE COMPLIANT PRODIGAL (RAMER SUMATI) SARAT CHANDRA CHATOPADHYAYA TRANSLATED FROM BENGALI BY DILIP KUMAR ROY IN COLLABORATION WITH JOYCE CHADWICY PRESENTED BY KIREET JOSHI CHARACTERS Shyamlal, a village elder Narayani, his wife Ramlal, his younger step-brother Nrityakali (Netya), their maid ...
... reward extracted from his supramental quarry, though at the cost of being dubbed a "wooden head" and many other complimentary epithets. Aeschylus, Shakespeare, Milton, Dante, Napoleon, Virgil, Shaw, Joyce, Hitler, Mussolini, Negus, Spanish Civil War, General Miaja, romping in, oh, the world-theatre seen at a glance exhibiting many-coloured movements for the eye's, the ear's and the soul's rejoicing. ...
... just now (you is not personal, but collective and indefinite) and will do less if you go blummering into buzzific intensities. (Please don't consult the dictionary, but look into the writings of Joyce and others). You say that peace is absolutely necessary for bringing down Love, Knowledge, etc.,—but don't you think purity is also required? And if peace and purity are to be established, a complete ...
... there was in the time of Homer, only we do not perceive it, because we ourselves live in the very shadow of it, and because we all shrink from the full meridian light of truth." 22 Modern writers like Joyce, Eliot, Gide and Camus have felt the need for myths appropriate to our times, and Herbert Read categorically observes: .. .the farther science penetrates into the mystery of life, the more ...
... psychological states. Goethe, Wordsworth, Stendhal represented a mentality and initiated a movement which led logically to the age of Hardy, Housman and Bridges and in the end to that of Lawrence and Joyce, Ezra Pound and Eliot and Auden. On the Continent we can consider Flaubert as the last of the classicists married to the very quintessence of Romanticism. A hard, self-regarding, self-critical mentality ...
... Jauhar, Surendranath, 750, 760,764 Jayaswal, K. P., 508 Jinnah,M.A.,529,702,710 Joan of Arc 55,191 Johnson, Lionel, 99 Jones, Sir William, 13 Joyce, James, 535 Julius Caesar, 140 Kabir, 9, 497 Kalidasa. 10,50, 69ff, 90H, 337, 695 Kama, 169, 172 Kanungo, Hemachandra, 216, 326 Kant, Immanuel, ...
... the 'Quest' which follow, as also the first year of her married life with Satyavan), the drama outlined in the poem extends over a single day (as, for example, in a modern 'prose epic' like James Joyce's Ulysses). The scheme of the poem may be indicated accordingly as follows: DAWN (The 'dawn' of the fateful day in Savitri's life, and in the life of evolving humanity: ...
... 54. The English Epic, p. 83. 55. TheSewaneeReview,Summer 1954,pp. 426-7. In his more exhaustive survey, The Ulysses Theme,W3. Stanford has brought together Leopold Bloom in Joyce's Ulysses and Kazantzakis's Odysseus and drawn some interesting points of similarity and contrast, (pp. 222-39). 56. Opus Posthumous, p. 100. 57. Cf. Browning: What does, what ...
... struggle for existence men encountered only prickly pear, rattling bones or pursuing shadows. The mood found expression, in the West, in the chilling literature of disillusion - in works like James Joyce's Ulysses and T.S. Eliot's The Waste Land. And not only the bleached and empty men and women of the war-weary West, but Indian youths too - recoiling from the death-stare of political, economic ...
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