摘要: 傅浩 译 Crazy Jane Talks with the Bishop I met the Bishop on the road And much said he and I. “Those breasts are flat and fallen now, Those veins must soon be dry; Live in a heavenly mansion, Not in some foul sty.” “Fair and foul are near of kin, And fair needs foul...
Bring me to the blasted oak That I, midnight upon the stroke, (All find safety in the tomb.) May call down curses on his head Because of my dear Jack that's dead. Coxcomb was the least he said: The solid man and the coxcomb. Nor was he Bishop when his ban Banished Jack the Jou...
The 1929 edition of The Winding Stair contained six poems; Words for Music Perhaps and Other Poems and “Crazy Jane Talks with the Bishop” were later added to form the 1933 edition (xix). Google Scholar Anne Fogarty, “Yeats, Ireland and Modernism” in The Cambridge Companion to Modernist...
THE BISHOP AND CRAZY JANE: AN UNPUBLISHED YEATS LETTERdoi:10.1093/nq/45-2-232bFOLEY TIMOTHY P
35 The Falling Of The Leaves 36 Crazy Jane Talks With The Bishop 37 The Choice 38 The Song Of Wandering Aengus 39 Long-Legged Fly 40 A Drunken Man's Praise Of Sobriety 41 Lapis Lazuli 42 I Am Of Ireland 43 What Then? 44 Why Should Not Old Men Be Mad? 45 For Anne Gregory 46 The...
Crazy Jane And Jack The Journeyman Crazy Jane And The Bishop Crazy Jane Grown Old Looks At The Dancers Crazy Jane On God Crazy Jane On The Day Of Judgment Crazy Jane On The Mountain Crazy Jane Reproved Crazy Jane Talks With The Bishop Cuchulain Comforted Cuchulan's Fight With The Sea ...