Indeed, Joyce was a remarkable survivor.
Joyce's Death and Wake Joyce's interest in ordinary living was always, as Ellmann puts it, "erratic and provisional."
On this day in 1941 James Joyce died in Zurich at the age of fifty-eight, from peritonitis brought on by a perforated ulcer. Even without the dislocation of WWII, Joyce's last years were beset with difficulties -- the schizophrenia of his daughter, his son's floundering career and broken marriage, his own poor health, ongoing battles over Ulysses and new worries about Finnegans Wake. "Though not so blind as Homer, and not so exiled as Dante," writes biographer Richard Ellmann, "he had reached his life's nadir."
Ellmann says also that the sometimes difficult and gloomy man must give way to his books, where he is "one of life's celebrants, in bad circumstances cracking good jokes, foisting upon ennuis and miseries his comic vision." |
1 comment:
Long live The Dead James Joyce. Thanks for the notification. Larry L. Lynch at "RememberingTheArgus."
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