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Una educación incompleta : autobiografía parcial (1964)

por Evelyn Waugh

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Part of the fabulous new hardback library of 24 Evelyn Waugh books, publishing in chronological order. 'Only when one has lost all curiosity about the future has one reached the age to write an autobiography'. Waugh begins his story with heredity, writing of the energetic, literary and sometimes eccentric men and women who, unknown to themselves, contributed to his genius. Save for a few pale shadows, his childhood was warm, bright and serene. The Hampstead and Lancing schooldays which followed were sometimes agreeable, but often not. His life at Oxford - which he evokes in Brideshead Revisited - was essentially a catalogue of friendship. His cool recollection of those hedonistic days is a portrait of the generation of Harold Acton, Cyril Connolly and Anthony Powell. That exclusive world he recalls with elegant wit and precision. He closes with his experiences as a master at a preparatory school in North Wales which inspired Decline and Fall.… (más)
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Waugh comienza su relato autobiográfico con su herencia, escribiendo sobre hombres y mujeres energéticos, literarios y a veces excéntricos que contribuyeron a su genio. Tuvo una infancia familiar convencional, aunque los años escolares que le sucedieron y que pasaría en Hampstead y Lancing, los recuerda con cierto dolor. Su vida como estudiante en Oxford fue en esencia un catálogo de amistades, un mundo exclusivo que rememora con elegante ingenio y precisión. Finalmente, concluye con sus experiencias como maestro en una escuela preparatoria en el Norte de Gales que le inspiraron su primera novela, Decadencia y caída.
  Natt90 | Dec 23, 2022 |
Since I came up to Oxford only one year after Mr. Waugh went down, I have little to add to his description. Two of his friends, Mr. Harold Acton and Mr. Tom Driberg, were still up, and the latter introduced me to the poetry of T. S. Eliot. The lunch parties were still going on. The George Restaurant was still crowded. Panache and elegance were still much admired. Making friends was still of much greater importance than the academic studies we were ostensibly there to pursue. “It was a male community,” says Mr. Waugh. “Undergraduettes lived in purdah.” This was still the rule, but I knew of exceptions to it. There were three or four girls in my day who had somehow managed to get out and, like token Jews in a Wasp community, were accepted by us.
añadido por SnootyBaronet | editarNew Yorker, W. H. Auden
 
Mr Waugh is a thoughtful rather than an intimate autobiographer, in this volume. He keeps the lid on. His aim appears to be the desire to conform, no doubt ironically, to a carefully prepared conventional pattern and to repose, almost masochistically, upon a belief in the Unremarkable. Clearly this, in so dashing an imagination, suggests a conflict. His marvellous feel for the disreputable comes from a man with a family addiction to the neutral yet aspiring...

Cautious, lonely, observant at first at Oxford, Mr Waugh eventually kicked out, did the right thing by drinking a lot and coming down deep in debt, and was ready for a far more interesting life than appears in this opening volume. One must hope that his feeling for impersonality will not become so subtle as to make the irony too sober. The best things in the present volume are those that recover the detail of a period.
añadido por SnootyBaronet | editarNew Statesman & Society, V.S. Pritchett
 
The Gibbonian classicism of A Little Learning is a great joy, but it is an act, a posture, and it derives from the father's more Dickensian histrionics as much as the fictional gift itself. It is no more a 'natural' style than the Elianism of Mr Waugh's father's bookish contemporaries, though it evokes an England of firmer tastes and more powerful convictions than were known to E. V. Lucas (whom Mr Waugh cites as his father's peer), Jack Squire, or W. W. Jacobs. The perfect mastery of the exact conceptual locution, often implying —as in Gibbon's own Autobiography—a. moral judgment that is not really there, is the source of all of Mr Waugh's humour and irony, as well as his carefully outmoded elegance...

The reader will be surprised at the lack of any literary passion in this first phase of Mr Waugh's development—no books set him on fire, Unless they are about the pre-Raphaelites. The young man who reads History and leaves Oxford with a bad third betrays no concern with scholarship. Mr Waugh, an ironic statue in a toga, practitioner of perfect prose, has always tended to frighten us as Gibbon or Johnson or Junius frightens us—with the hint of a formidable library, much of it in his brain. We need not be frightened any more, nor need we cringe, with an underdog whine, in the presence of the accents of aristocracy.
añadido por SnootyBaronet | editarObserver, Anthony Burgess
 

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TO MY GRANDCHILDREN,

ALEXANDER AND SOPHIA WAUGH,

EMILY-ALBERT FITZHERBERT

AND EDWARD JUSTIN
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Only when one has lost all curiosity about the future has one reached the age to write an autobiography.
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I lately took up and re-read after many years H. G. Well's The Time Machine (conjecturing, incidentally, who of modern critics, if presented with the sentence out of context, would identify the author of: *The soft radiance of the incandescent lights in the lilies of silver caught the bubbles that flashed and passed in our glasses'). At the end of the volume, the first edition, were sixteen pages of advertisement of the popular novelists of 1895, all eulogized by reputable papers with an extravagance seldom accorded to me in my professional life; all, today, quite forgotten. It seemed I had taken a little hop in the Time Machine and had seen displayed before me the futility of contemporary esteem.
This is part of the grim cyclorama of spoliation which surrounded all English experience in this century and my understanding of the immediate past (which presumably is the motive for reading a book such as this) must be incomplete unless this huge deprivation of the quiet pleasure of the eye is accepted as a dominant condition, sometimes making for impotent resentment, sometimes for mere sentimental apathy, sometimes poisoning love of country and of neighbours. To have been born into a world of beauty, to die amid ugliness, is the common fate of all us exiles.
In person he was wan, skinny, sharp-faced, with watery eyes. Like many humorists he gave scant evidence of humour in private intercourse. In losing the accents of Wapping he lost most of his voice and spoke through the side of his thin lips in furtive, almost criminal tones, disconcerting in a man of transcendent, indeed of tedious respectability. He was a secular puritan, one of those who ‘have not got the Faith and will not have the fun’ .
Oh, but I have done an unselfish thing in telling him this! For I know he will yearn to be about the business of Balbus, and, as likely as not, he will plant himself upon the meadow with the willows, that looks so spring-like from my book-room door today. Nevertheless one must not repine. My work in this line is done. Balbus has built his wall.
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Part of the fabulous new hardback library of 24 Evelyn Waugh books, publishing in chronological order. 'Only when one has lost all curiosity about the future has one reached the age to write an autobiography'. Waugh begins his story with heredity, writing of the energetic, literary and sometimes eccentric men and women who, unknown to themselves, contributed to his genius. Save for a few pale shadows, his childhood was warm, bright and serene. The Hampstead and Lancing schooldays which followed were sometimes agreeable, but often not. His life at Oxford - which he evokes in Brideshead Revisited - was essentially a catalogue of friendship. His cool recollection of those hedonistic days is a portrait of the generation of Harold Acton, Cyril Connolly and Anthony Powell. That exclusive world he recalls with elegant wit and precision. He closes with his experiences as a master at a preparatory school in North Wales which inspired Decline and Fall.

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