No longer morn for me when I am dead
Than you shall hear the surly sullen bell
Give warning to the world that I am fled
From this vile world, with vilest worms to dwell:
Nay, if you read this line, remember not
The hand that writ it; for I love you so
That I in your sweet thoughts would be forgot
If thinking on me then should make you woe.
O, if, I say, you look upon this verse
When I, perhaps, compounded am with clay
Do not so much as my poor name rehearse,
But let your love even with my life decay,
Lest the wise world should look into your moan
And mock you with me after I am gone.
(W. Shakespeare Sonnet LXXI)
, , : (surly sullen bells), ; , , , , , , (vile world, wise world); , (vilest worms); (your sweet thoughts); , , (my poor name). , ; , XLIX: To leave poor me thou hast the strength of laws. Since why to love I can allege no cause : my poor lips (CXXVIII); I'll live in this poor rhyme (CVII). sweet . LXIII: my sweet love's beauty; LXXXIX: thy sweet beloved name; CVIII: sweet boy. , : dear heart.
LXXI : (surly sullen), (world:: vile world), (vilest). .
, , , 1.
, .. , , , , , , , .
, , , . ( conventional standing epithet): green wood, lady gay, fair lady, fair England, salt seas, salt tears, true love.
, :
And when he to the green wood went,
No body saw he there,
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But Chield Morice, on a milk-white steed,
Combing down his yellow hair1.
, .. : soft pillow, green wood, : bonny boy, bonnie young page, bonnie ship, bonnie isle .. false steward, proud porter, , , : silk napkin, silver cups, long tables.
, . , :
Naething mair the lady saw
But the gloomy clouds and sky.
.. : . , .
.. . . .. , , . , , , .
, - : fair sun, the sable night, wide sea, .. , , . : a grand style, unvalued jewels, vast and trunkless legs of stone - , , , .. . , , , . , , , : an angry sky, the howling storm, , : laughing valleys, surly sullen bells.
, , : . , . , .
.. . . , , . , , .
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() .. 1. : And then in a nice, old-fashioned, lady-like, maiden-lady way, she blushed (A. Christie).
, , , :
There is no interrogation in his eyes
Or in the hands, quiet over the horse's neck,
And the eyes watchful, waiting, perceiving, indifferent.
(T.S. Eliot)
, .. , , , , , .
I will make a palace fit for you and me
Of green days in forest and blue days at sea.
(R.L. Stevenson)
, : days in green forest, days at blue sea1.
, , , :
How can those terrified vague fingers push The feathered glory from her loosening thighs?
And how can body laid in that white rush
But feel the strange heart beating where it lies?
(W.B. Yeats. Leda and the Swan)
, .. , , . ( ) : I-am-not-that-kind-of-girl look; Shoot' em-down type; To produce facts in a Would-you-believe-it kind of way.
: The widow-making, unchilding, unfathering deeps (G.M. Hopkins).
, : a hell of a mess, a devil of a sea, a dwarf of a fellow .. . :
listen: there is a hell
of a good universe next door; let's go.
(an angel of a girl, a horse of a girl, a doll of a wife, a fool of a policeman, a hook of a nose, a vow of a hat, a jewel of a film : two-legged ski-rocket of a kid, a forty-pound skunk of a freckled wild cat) .
, . , .. , , . a doll of a wife , . . . wife, doll. : the wife is like a doll the wife is a doll. : the girl is an angel, the girl is like a horse, the policeman is a fool ..
. . horse , , , .
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, - , , , , . . . , , , , .
, , , , , .
. (once below a time) (chips of when) . , a grief ago, a farmyard away, all the sun long, a white noise, the shadow of a sound, a pretty how town, little whos, he danced his did, for as long as forever is.
. , , , , ( .. ), , .
. 1, . (, ) . . .
. , , , . , , . , , , 2. , , -, . : is dreadfully married. He is the most married man I ever saw (A.Ward).
, , , , - .
, - , .
. Colorless green ideas sleep furiously , . . . , , , , , , . , Furiously sleep ideas green colorless, . . , 1957 Two for Max Zorn. The Child Seems Sleeping, .. 1. Colorless green ideas sleep furiously , , , . , , .
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.
, ( ), . : And faith unfaithful kept him falsely true (A. Tennyson).
. . XVI : And painful pleasure turns to pleasing pain.
. :
With the farming of a verse
Make a vineyard of the curse,
Sing of human unsuccess
in a rapture of distress.
. , . , . , self-consciously unself-conscious, boastfully modest and he-man.
, : , faith:: unfaithful, falsely:: true, rapture:: distress, , . rapture distress , , .
, . : had a face like a plateful of mortal sins (. Behan).
a plateful of mortal sins , , - .
terribly smart, awfully beautiful .. , , .
: worst friend, best enemy. , , ? worst friend .
. a grief ago. , . , :
. grief , a grief ago , , . , .. - . a grief ago , , , .. , . . : alt the sun long, farmyards away. :
farmyards away , , - 1.
. . , .
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- , . , . . , , , , :
When I was a younger man two wives ago, 250,000 cigarettes ago, 3,000 quarts of booze ago... (K. Vonnegut, Jr., Cat's Cradle). wives, cigarettes, quarts , .
. , a dozen girls away from virginity.
. . . , . , . 1968 , The Lilting House 2. lilt . house . . house , , , , , lilting house . , .. . , lilting house = , , , .. . . Lilting House . , , , , , 1.
, , , , ..
, , , . , . (. , . ). , , , .
.
, , .
, .. , , (), () . , : at-homeness, come-hithering (face). : an underbathroomed and overmonumented country, infantterribilism, roamance, manunkind.
, - . . , : hear her talk you'd think everybody in Cressley was out to do her down. But she doesn't let them. Oh, no, she puts them in their place all right. A proper putter-in-place she is... (S. Barstow. A Kind of Loving).
, (. . 135), , , , , . , 7 : We're in an if-you-cannot-kick-them-join-them age (O. Nash).
, , .. 1.
, - . :
And I am unhappily sure that she is drinking champagne
with aristocrats
And exchanging cynicisms with sophistocrats.
sophistocrats sophisticated aristocrats. . , balalaikalogical -logical, (mineralogical, lexicological, archeological ..). psychological.
The preoccupation of the gourmet with good food
is psychological Just as the preoccupation of White Russians with
Dark Eyes is balalaikalogical.
(O. Nash)
, . : So fine a specimen of Homo Insapiens, subspecies, Col. Brit (R. Aldington. The Colonel's Daughter).
: The books and lectures are better sorrow-drowners than drink and fornication, they leave no headache (A. Huxley).
. : Most are accepters, born and bred to harness. And take things as they come (L. Macneice).
.. , foretell forewarn foresuffer, : AndI, Tiresias, have foresuffered all (T.S. Eliot).
manunkind, un- , . : Pity this busy monster manunkind not (E.E. Cummings).
Mankind manunkind.
, . , kind , unkind , a man unkind . , mankind unkind.
, : But now... now! I find myself wanting something more, something heavenlier, something less human (A. Huxley).
. heavenlier , .
, , , , , - .
. X. : What words can strangle this deaf moonlight? (H. Crane. Voyages).
strangle , . moonlight . , , , ; -.
, , , , , , . , . . , , .
, , , , .
, , () , , , , . , , , . .