翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ The Hound of the Baskervilles (1959 film)
・ The Hound of the Baskervilles (1972 film)
・ The Horse Is Dead
・ The Horse Latitudes
・ The Horse Legends
・ The Horse of Pride
・ The Horse Soldiers
・ The Horse That Bud Bought
・ The Horse Thief
・ The Horse Trust
・ The Horse Whisperer
・ The Horse Whisperer (film)
・ The Horse Whisperer (novel)
・ The Horse with My Name
・ The Horse with the Flying Tail
The Horse's Mouth
・ The Horse's Mouth (film)
・ The Horse, the Rat and the Swan
・ The Horse, the Wheel and Language
・ The Horsecatcher
・ The Horseman
・ The Horseman (film)
・ The Horseman on the Roof
・ The Horseman on the Roof (novel)
・ The Horsemasters
・ The Horsemen
・ The Horsemen (1971 film)
・ The Horsemen Aerobatic Team
・ The Horsemen Project
・ The Horsemen's Voice


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The Horse's Mouth : ウィキペディア英語版
The Horse's Mouth

''The Horse's Mouth'' is a 1944 novel by Joyce Cary, the third in his ''First Trilogy'', whose first two books are ''Herself Surprised'' (1941) and ''To Be A Pilgrim'' (1942). ''The Horse's Mouth'' follows the adventures of Gulley Jimson, an artist who would exploit his friends and acquaintances to earn a quid, told from his point of view, just as the other books in the First Trilogy tell events from their central characters' different points of view. Cary's novel also uses Gulley's unique perspective to comment on the social and political events of the time.
==Plot==
Jimson's father, based on a real person known to Cary, was an Academy artist who is heart-broken when Impressionism drives his style from popular taste. Jimson has put aside any consideration of acceptance by either academy or public and paints in fits of creative ecstasy. Although his work is known to collectors and has become valuable, Jimson himself is forced to live from one scam or petty theft to the next. Cadging enough money to buy paints and supplies, he spends much of the novel seeking surfaces, such as walls, to serve as ground for his paintings.
When the novel opens, Jimson has just been released from jail. He seeks money from Hickson, his sometime patron. Later in the book, he tracks down Sara Monday, his ex-wife, and tries to obtain an early painting from her that is worth a great deal. Sara is reluctant to give up the picture, which serves as a reminder of her youth. In the struggle that follows, Sara falls and suffers a fatal injury. Jimson is unsentimental about his life and work and sees himself as someone who has given over to a destructive passion. Yet he regrets nothing.
At the novel's end, Jimson reflects on his life and the home and family that he has missed. But he recognizes that he himself made the decision to sacrifice those possibilities in order to pursue his art. It is only clear at the end that Jimson has suffered a paralysing stroke, and can no longer paint. As he is being taken to hospital, a nun who is nursing him remarks that he should be praying instead of laughing, "Same thing, Mother," replies Jimson, his last words.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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