What Joyce Believed (Yogibogey box version)
Joyce believed that modern literature was empty. Joyce believed that the universal can
be found in the particular. Joyce
believed that in Ireland, just at the right moment, an informer always
appears. Joyce believed that if
the artist was to see clearly and report what he saw freshly, it was necessary
to stand outside the commonplace responses to experience derived from family,
church, or country. Joyce
believed that his genius had cast its shadow on Lucia's psyche and perhaps it
had. Joyce believed that a writer
is always in exile. Joyce believed
that a writer should live near a border, so that he could leave immediately if
problems arose. Joyce believed
that Dubliners had much more in common as a group of people than Londoners or
Parisians. Joyce believed that the
job of the artist was not to convince, but to make people see. Joyce believed that to make Bloom
representative of the future of business, Bloom had to be in advertising. Joyce believed that she was entitled to
alimony. Joyce believed that short
stories, by their very nature, tend to be about epiphanal moments:
estrangement. Joyce believed that
the opposite of a great truth is also true. Joyce believed that Jewish and Irish people had a number of
characteristics in common, including impulsiveness, a tendency toward fantasy,
and associative rather than rational thought. Joyce believed that this business involved a large amount of
money. Joyce believed that there
was music in everyday words. Joyce
believed that should the place be destroyed, it could be reconstructed and rebuilt
exactly using only Ulysses. Joyce
believed that all Jungian archetypes derived from the original race of
Atlantides who had perished millennia before. Joyce believed that it could be true. Joyce believed that the entire block of
381,150 shares could not have been sold at the market price of $11.31 on
November 17, 1979. But how Joyce
had known this has still not been made clear. The Yogibogey box?
The Pali Book unpawned?
Some Atlantidean logos?
T.S. Eliot and Joyce believed that they could help counter such
disintegration thorough their works.
Email: inthemargins03@hotmail.com
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