The Lost GirlCambridge University Press, 1981 M09 30 - 426 páginas The Cambridge edition of The Lost Girl uses the manuscript which D. H. Lawrence wrote in Sicily in 1920 to recapture his direct relationship with the text, and in particular to recover the characteristically fluent punctuation which the novel's original printers obscured or ignored. The edition prints all four of the passages which the publisher censored without Lawrence's full knowledge and the hero's name is correctly spelled for the first time in an English edition. The novel is set mainly in the Eastwood of Lawrence's youth, the full annotation identifies a great many real-life characters and settings. John Worthen's introduction gives an accurate account of The Lost Girl's development, composition and publication, and the influence upon the book of Lawrence's desire to write a commercially successful novel. The textual apparatus records all variant readings. |
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Resultados 1-5 de 87
Página xxiii
... asked Duckworth for a £ 50 advance on Sons and Lovers . With his various worries , it was hardly the moment to be busy with a long and increasingly unpublishable book . Lawrence wrote to Garnett on II March : I am a damned curse unto ...
... asked Duckworth for a £ 50 advance on Sons and Lovers . With his various worries , it was hardly the moment to be busy with a long and increasingly unpublishable book . Lawrence wrote to Garnett on II March : I am a damned curse unto ...
Página xxv
... asked her to try to recover the manuscript when she visited her sister in Munich . But her journey turned out to be a nightmare of muddle ' in a country still disorganised by war ; 36 she probably did not go to Munich , and she ...
... asked her to try to recover the manuscript when she visited her sister in Munich . But her journey turned out to be a nightmare of muddle ' in a country still disorganised by war ; 36 she probably did not go to Munich , and she ...
Página xxxiv
... asked for the TCC ) that he could not let him have it because it was now on its way to The Queen ; but he would send a copy of the ' only long serious alteration'.91 Lawrence enclosed the two - page revision in his letter . This date 24 ...
... asked for the TCC ) that he could not let him have it because it was now on its way to The Queen ; but he would send a copy of the ' only long serious alteration'.91 Lawrence enclosed the two - page revision in his letter . This date 24 ...
Página xl
... asked him to send you at once the revised page , so that you can please yourself . Of course the original is best . 124 Seltzer's handling of the textual problem is discussed below . In England , Secker and his printers faced a ...
... asked him to send you at once the revised page , so that you can please yourself . Of course the original is best . 124 Seltzer's handling of the textual problem is discussed below . In England , Secker and his printers faced a ...
Página xlii
... asked if he could be sent proofs : ' Or are you using the old plates ? ' 136 Secker was using the old plates . Once again 131 This can be demonstrated by an emendation on p . 23. The Secker text had the correct reading : ' red , shiny ...
... asked if he could be sent proofs : ' Or are you using the old plates ? ' 136 Secker was using the old plates . Once again 131 This can be demonstrated by an emendation on p . 23. The Secker text had the correct reading : ' red , shiny ...
Contenido
THE LOST GIRL | 1 |
ELSA CULVERWELL | 341 |
EXPLANATORY NOTES | 359 |
TEXTUAL APPARATUS | 403 |
A note on pounds shillings and pence | 426 |
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Términos y frases comunes
Allaye Alvina Alvina sat asked beautiful began Catherine Carswell cauce chapel Cicc Ciccio cold Compton Mackenzie copies cried curious D. H. Lawrence dark DHL's recreation door Dr Mitchell Eastwood edition Elsa Culverwell England English everything eyes face father feel felt fingers French Geoffrey gone grey hair hand head Italian Italy James Houghton Kishwégin kissed Knarborough knew laughed Lawrence Lawrence's Letter to Secker looked Lost Girl Louis Madame Madame's Manchester House marry matron Miss Frost Miss Houghton Miss Niell Miss Pinnegar morning mother Mountsier Natcha-Kee-Tawara never nodded Nottingham novel nurse pale Pancrazio piano Picinisco poor rose round seemed Seltzer smiled Sons and Lovers sort stood strange sure talking things Throttle-Ha'penny took Tuke turned Vaali voice waiting watched Witham woman Women in Love wonderful Woodhouse yellow young