Difference between revisions of "Fall"
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Jump to navigationJump to search (I smiled at her and kissed her nose as I gently backed away from her cherry) |
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− | + | * '''The story of the fall''' → '''The tale of the fall''' → '''The fall''' | |
− | + | ** [http://digicoll.library.wisc.edu/cgi-bin/JoyceColl/JoyceColl-idx?type=turn&id=JoyceColl.HaymanFirstDrft&entity=JoyceColl.HaymanFirstDrft.p0058&isize=L&q1=father A first-draft version of Finnegans wake] | |
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− | + | * '''fall''' | |
− | + | ** The fall of [[Finn|Tim Finnegan]] from his ladder in the ballad ''Finnegan's Wake'' | |
− | + | ** The symbolic Fall of Man from a state of sinless grace in the book of Genesis | |
− | + | ** Humpty Dumpty's Fall → cf. Oscar Wilde, whose wife Constance remarked: "He fell like Humpty Dumpty" | |
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− | + | * '''Fall:''' Autumn → symbolizing the beginning of the end | |
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− | + | * '''Fall:''' (''German'') fall; case | |
− | + | ** '''''Der Fall Wagner'':''' ''The Case of Wagner'', in which Friedrich Nietzsche explains why he has turned his back on Richard Wagner | |
− | + | [[Category:Fall]] | |
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− | * The symbolic | ||
− | * Fall: |
Latest revision as of 15:23, 5 July 2012
- The story of the fall → The tale of the fall → The fall
- fall
- The fall of Tim Finnegan from his ladder in the ballad Finnegan's Wake
- The symbolic Fall of Man from a state of sinless grace in the book of Genesis
- Humpty Dumpty's Fall → cf. Oscar Wilde, whose wife Constance remarked: "He fell like Humpty Dumpty"
- Fall: Autumn → symbolizing the beginning of the end
- Fall: (German) fall; case
- Der Fall Wagner: The Case of Wagner, in which Friedrich Nietzsche explains why he has turned his back on Richard Wagner