Jump to content

Lipton’s Journal/January 3, 1955/197: Difference between revisions

m
Added note.
(Created page.)
 
m (Added note.)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{LJtop}}
{{LJtop}}
In ''[[Barbary Shore]]'' I planted the seeds of a great many things I am thinking today. Thus, the meaningless beginning of Chap. 16, by McLeod “You know, m’bucko, its onanists the world is forever shaping, and if you have a taste for dialectics it demands little more to see that it is only by onanism at last one can receive the world. . . . If this doesn’t ring a bell for you now, it’ll toll a mass someday, for ye’re in the archetype.” Or Lannie with echo obscenities—Bubbles, baby, bubble that fat.
In ''[[Barbary Shore]]'' I planted the seeds of a great many things I am thinking today. Thus, the meaningless beginning of Chap. 16, by McLeod{{refn|William LcLeod is a former communist “hangman” who renounces Stalinism, and preaches a variant of Trotskyism in ''[[Barbary Shore]]''.}} “You know, m’bucko, its onanists the world is forever shaping, and if you have a taste for dialectics it demands little more to see that it is only by onanism at last one can receive the world. . . . If this doesn’t ring a bell for you now, it’ll toll a mass someday, for ye’re in the archetype.” Or Lannie with echo obscenities—Bubbles, baby, bubble that fat.
 
{{Notes|title=note|width=60em}}


{{LJnav}}
{{LJnav}}
[[Category:January 3, 1955]]
[[Category:January 3, 1955]]