Mervyn Peake cytaty
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Mervyn Laurence Peake – brytyjski artysta, poeta i ilustrator. Najbardziej znany ze swojego dzieła Gormenghast, gdzie opisuje życie Tytusa Groana, 77. hrabiego na zamku Gormenghast. Jego dzieło porównuje się czasami do prac J.R.R. Tolkiena, choć surrealistyczne zacięcie w jego twórczości bliższe są tendencjom jakie znajdziemy w książkach Charlesa Dickensa czy Roberta Louisa Stevensona. Twórczość Peake'a obejmuje także krótkie opowiadania, np. Letters from a Lost Uncle.

Pisarz zasłynął w latach 40. jako znany portrecista i jego prace do dziś dnia wiszą w Narodowej Galerii Portretów w Anglii. Wikipedia  

✵ 9. Lipiec 1911 – 17. Listopad 1968   •   Natępne imiona Мервін Пік, מרווין פיק
Mervyn Peake: 91   Cytatów 0   Polubień

Mervyn Peake: Cytaty po angielsku

“The ritual which his body had had to perform for fifty years had been no preparation for the unexpected.”

Mervyn Peake książka Titus Groan

Źródło: Titus Groan (1946), Chapter 41 “The Burning” (pp. 248-249)

“So you thought you’d come back, my wicked one. Where have you been?”
“In hell,” said Titus. “Swigging blood and munching scorpions.”
“That must have been great fun, my darling.”

Mervyn Peake książka Titus Alone

“Not so,” said Titus, “hell is overrated.”
Źródło: Titus Alone (1959), Chapter 42 (p. 881)

“I saw all of a sudden
No sign of any ship.”

Poem O'er seas that have no beaches

““I am a beggar.”
“You are a travesty,” said Titus, “and when you die the earth will breathe again.””

Mervyn Peake książka Titus Alone

Źródło: Titus Alone (1959), Chapter 16 (p. 829)

““There’s something else, Mr. Muzzlehatch.”
“I’m sure there is. In fact there is everything else.””

Mervyn Peake książka Titus Alone

Źródło: Titus Alone (1959), Chapter 47 (p. 893)

“Art should be artless, not heartless.”

Mervyn Peake książka Titus Alone

Źródło: Titus Alone (1959), Chapter 24 (p. 845)

“Other people’s faults can be fascinating. One’s own are dreary.”

Źródło: Gormenghast (1950), Chapter 48 (p. 647)

“Let him play,” whispered Cheeta. “Let him make believe that he’s alive again.”

Mervyn Peake książka Titus Alone

Źródło: Titus Alone (1959), Chapter 105 (p. 1000)

“For Peake, the weight of moral standards comes from their being part of a tradition, and any tradition lies outside the individual’s potential and needs. Thus adherence to a morality impedes development of the whole self and denies real maturity.”

Joseph L. Sanders, “The Passions in Their Clay” Mervyn Peake’s Titus Stories, reprinted in the omnibus edition The Gormenghast Novels published by The Overlook Press, p. 1098

“Change and growth cannot be halted, time must run on. That is the whole moral of the three books.”

Colin Greenland, Beowulf to Kafka: Mervyn Peake’s Titus Alone, reprinted in the omnibus edition The Gormenghast Novels published by The Overlook Press, p. 1141

“Words were shapes and sounds to him. He saw them, as if he were listening to an unknown language, in shapes.”

Maeve Gilmore (his widow), Introduction to A Book of Nonsense, p. 10

“His mind fell asleep. His wits fell awake. His cock trembled like a harp-string.”

Mervyn Peake książka Titus Alone

Źródło: Titus Alone (1959), Chapter 42 (p. 881)

“Life must be various, incongruous, vile and electric. Life must be ruthless and as full of love as may be found in a jaguar’s fang.”

Mervyn Peake książka Titus Alone

“I like the way you talk, young man,” said Grass, “but I don’t know what you’re saying.”
Źródło: Titus Alone (1959), Chapter 24 (p. 841)