Frasi di Anthony Burgess
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Anthony Burgess, pseudonimo di John Burgess Wilson , è stato uno scrittore, critico letterario e glottoteta britannico, attivo anche come compositore, librettista, poeta, drammaturgo, sceneggiatore, giornalista, saggista, traduttore ed educatore.

È considerato uno dei più grandi autori inglesi del Novecento. Wikipedia  

✵ 25. Febbraio 1917 – 22. Novembre 1993
Anthony Burgess photo
Anthony Burgess: 308   frasi 5   Mi piace

Anthony Burgess frasi celebri

“Devo forse essere soltanto un’arancia meccanica?”

Arancia Meccanica

“Non si chiedono mica quale è la causa della bontà. e allora perché il contrario?”

A Clockwork Orange
Arancia Meccanica
Variante: Non si chiedono mica qual è la causa della bontà, e allora perchè il contrario?

“Se Arancia meccanica, così come 1984, rientra nel novero dei salutari moniti letterari – o cinematografici – contro l'indifferenza, la sensibilità morbosa e l'eccessiva fiducia nello Stato, allora quest'opera avrà qualche valore.”

Origine: Lettera al Los Angeles Times http://www.archiviokubrick.it/opere/film/am/burgess.html, 13 febbraio 1972. Traduzione dall'inglese come in Arancia Meccanica, Einaudi Tascabili 351

Anthony Burgess Frasi e Citazioni

Questa traduzione è in attesa di revisione. È corretto?

Anthony Burgess: Frasi in inglese

“And now, as so often happened, my brain in a fever took over the datum of the dream and enriched and expanded it. Norman Douglas spoke pedantically on behalf of the buggers. `We have this right, you see, to shove it up. On a road to Capri I found a postman who had fallen off his bicycle, you see, unconscious, somewhat concussed. He lay in exactly the right position. I buggered him with athletic swiftness: he would come to and feel none the worse.’ The Home Secretary nodded sympathetically while the rain wept on to him in Old Palace Yard. `I mean, minors. I mean, there’d be little in it for us if you restricted the act to consenting males over, say, eighteen. Boys are so pliable, so exquisitely sodomizable. You do see that, don’t you, old man?’ The Home Secretary nodded as if to say: Of course, old public-school man myself, old boy. I saw a lot of known faces, Pearson, Tyrwit, Lewis, Charlton, James, all most reasonable, claiming the legal right to maul and suck and bugger. I put myself in the gathering and said, also most reasonable, that it was nothing to do with the law: you were still left with the ethics and theology of the thing. What we had a right to desire was love, and nothing hindered that right. Oh nonsense, he’s such a bore. As for theology, isn’t there that apocryphal book of the Bible in which heterosexuality is represented as the primal curse?”

Fiction, Earthly Powers (1980)

“God, say some philosophers, manifests himself in the sublunary world in particular beauties, truths and acts of benevolence; properly, the values should be conjoined to shadow their identity in the godhead, but this happens so infrequently that one must suppose divinity condones a kind of diabolic fracture or else, and perhaps my book is already giving some hint of this, he demonstrates his ineffable freedom through contriving at times a wanton inconsistency. If this is so, we need not wonder at Messalina’s failure to match her beauty with a love of truth and goodness. She was a chronic liar and she was thoroughly bad. But her beauty, we are told, was a miracle. The symmetry of her body obeyed all the golden rules of the mystical architects, her skin was without even the most minuscule flaw and it glowed as though gold had been inlaid behind translucent ivory, her breasts were full and yet pertly disdained earth’s pull, the nipples nearly always erect, and visibly so beneath her byssinos, as in a state of perpetual sexual excitation, the areolas delicately pigmented to a kind of russet. The sight of her weaving bare white arms was enough, it is said, to make a man grit his teeth with desire to be encircled by them; the smooth plain of her back, tapering to slenderness only to expand lusciously to the opulence of her perfect buttocks, demanded unending caresses.”

Fiction, The Kingdom of the Wicked (1985)

“If the world is to be improved it must be by the exercise of individual charity.”

Non-Fiction, Here Comes Everybody: An Introduction to James Joyce for the Ordinary Reader (1965)

“If you reject family - which a mother holds together - as well as the ties of Church and State, is there anything left for you?”

Non-Fiction, Here Comes Everybody: An Introduction to James Joyce for the Ordinary Reader (1965)

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