Dream of Fair to Middling Women is Samuel Beckett’s first novel. Written in English "in a matter of weeks" in 1932 when Beckett was only 26 and living...
5 KB (535 words) - 00:51, 11 March 2024
A Dream of Fair Women is a poem by Alfred Tennyson. It was written and published in 1833 as "A Legend of Fair Women", but was heavily revised for republication...
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first novel Dream of Fair to Middling Women (published posthumously in 1992). It was written in English, rather than the French of much of Beckett's later...
8 KB (1,070 words) - 16:35, 9 May 2024
to stone" is in Beckett's Dream of Fair to Middling Women notebook. Beckett's collection More Pricks Than Kicks, ten stories in the life and death of...
4 KB (546 words) - 21:21, 10 July 2023
collection of short prose by Samuel Beckett, first published in 1934. It contains extracts from his earlier novel, Dream of Fair to Middling Women (for which...
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Krapp's Last Tape (category Theatre of the Absurd)
and [had a] passionate love of green clothing." An allusion to Peggy Sinclair also appears in Dream of Fair to Middling Women in Smeraldina, the "little...
61 KB (8,414 words) - 15:06, 11 July 2024
2028 in public domain (category Articles to be expanded from January 2024)
World, William Faulkner's Light in August, Samuel Becket's Dream of Fair to Middling Women, Graham Greene's Stamboul Train, Ernest Hemingway's Death in...
10 KB (636 words) - 19:30, 21 May 2024
Samuel Beckett (category Fellows of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences)
of it became evident in Beckett's later works, such as Watt and Waiting for Godot. In 1932, he wrote his first novel, Dream of Fair to Middling Women...
90 KB (9,430 words) - 16:48, 17 July 2024
Suzanne Dechevaux-Dumesnil (category 20th-century French women)
love - how the women in Samuel Beckett's life helped to shape him - Independent.ie". Independent.ie. Retrieved 12 January 2018. Context of Happy Days at...
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Waiting for Godot (category Pages containing links to subscription-only content)
us to identify him with the anima, the feminine image of Vladimir's soul. It explains Estragon's propensity for poetry, his sensitivity and dreams, his...
142 KB (17,281 words) - 21:57, 20 July 2024