Difference between revisions of "Kanes"
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*'''John Maynard Keynes:''' economist and associate of Virginia Woolf and of the Bloomsbury Group. A practicing homosexual in his youth, later married and heterosexual. "Kanes nought" - suggest Keynes suffered nought for his homosexual past in contrast to Oscar Wilde. '''Bloom's bury''' is a pun in its own write that one would half expect in ''FW''. | *'''John Maynard Keynes:''' economist and associate of Virginia Woolf and of the Bloomsbury Group. A practicing homosexual in his youth, later married and heterosexual. "Kanes nought" - suggest Keynes suffered nought for his homosexual past in contrast to Oscar Wilde. '''Bloom's bury''' is a pun in its own write that one would half expect in ''FW''. | ||
− | *'''Caine's nought''' | + | *'''Caine's nought:''' Caine is a cipher, nothing, lost or ruined. |
+ | |||
+ | *'''Kane''': two Lord Mayor's of Dublin: Joseph (1725-6) and Nathaniel (1734-35) | ||
+ | |||
+ | *'''Canes not:''' not caning, striking, beating with a stick |
Latest revision as of 16:48, 28 February 2018
- John Maynard Keynes: economist and associate of Virginia Woolf and of the Bloomsbury Group. A practicing homosexual in his youth, later married and heterosexual. "Kanes nought" - suggest Keynes suffered nought for his homosexual past in contrast to Oscar Wilde. Bloom's bury is a pun in its own write that one would half expect in FW.
- Caine's nought: Caine is a cipher, nothing, lost or ruined.
- Kane: two Lord Mayor's of Dublin: Joseph (1725-6) and Nathaniel (1734-35)
- Canes not: not caning, striking, beating with a stick