... but the clouds ...: Difference between revisions

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::: Mrs Mallet: I saw her lips move.<ref>{{cite book |first=W. B. |last=Yeats |date=1966 |title=The Collected Plays of W B Yeats |___location=New York |publisher=Macmillan |page=385 |isbn=978-0-3330-0747-1}}</ref>
 
"As [[Katharine Worth]] has pointed out, in Yeatsian terminology 'shades' [the final word of Yeats's poem] necessarily conjures up thoughts of [[spirit]]sspirits or [[ghost]]s along with the onset of evening, and Beckett's play only reinforces this somewhat understated {{linktext|nuance}}."<ref name="multiref1"/> The prevalence of 'ghosts' in Beckett's later writings hardly needs commenting on.<ref>{{cite journal |first=Graham |last=Fraser |s2cid=162193478 |title=No More Than Ghosts Make: The Hauntology and Gothic Minimalism of Beckett's Late Work |date=Fall 2000 |journal=[[Modern Fiction Studies]] |volume=46 |number=3 |publisher=Johns Hopkins University Press |pages=772–785 |doi=10.1353/mfs.2000.0051}}</ref>
 
[[John Calder]] in his review of the three plays shown on BBC2 had this to say about ''... but the clouds ...'':