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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Página xxiii
... began to creep into Lawrence's mind ; not of its quality , but of the kind of novel it was , and whether he should at that date be writing it . Sons and Lovers was still not published , and though Garnett and Duckworth were enthusiastic ...
... began to creep into Lawrence's mind ; not of its quality , but of the kind of novel it was , and whether he should at that date be writing it . Sons and Lovers was still not published , and though Garnett and Duckworth were enthusiastic ...
Página xxiv
... began three years ago . I should like to go on with it now.32 It is possible that he was thinking of the ' Burns Novel ' - also left in Germany , also started three years before . But as the situation was repeated exactly in the winter ...
... began three years ago . I should like to go on with it now.32 It is possible that he was thinking of the ' Burns Novel ' - also left in Germany , also started three years before . But as the situation was repeated exactly in the winter ...
Página xxvii
... began novel ' appears in his diary for 12 February.45 It is not , however , absolutely certain what he actually did with the manuscript . He told Amy Lowell that ' I have just begun a new novel ' , 46 and Catherine Carswell also heard ...
... began novel ' appears in his diary for 12 February.45 It is not , however , absolutely certain what he actually did with the manuscript . He told Amy Lowell that ' I have just begun a new novel ' , 46 and Catherine Carswell also heard ...
Página xxviii
... began again : only this time the novel was allowed to grow to full length . Moreover , it is perhaps unlikely that The Lost Girl owed very much to ' The Insurrection ' beyond its central situation ( which was , in any case , from real ...
... began again : only this time the novel was allowed to grow to full length . Moreover , it is perhaps unlikely that The Lost Girl owed very much to ' The Insurrection ' beyond its central situation ( which was , in any case , from real ...
Página xxxii
... began to wonder if he could get the book serialised in England as well : ' It would be a safeguard against prosecutions , and it would bring me some money . I think I shall try . '78 For two months he had been insisting that the novel ...
... began to wonder if he could get the book serialised in England as well : ' It would be a safeguard against prosecutions , and it would bring me some money . I think I shall try . '78 For two months he had been insisting that the novel ...
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