The Japanese Quince | The Blackbird in, John Galsworthy's The Japanese Quince
Lanier is an educator at Georgia Southern University. In the following essay, she discusses the blackbird of Galsworthy's story as a symbol of' 'the call to spontaneity," a concept that is difficult for Mr. Nilson to accept.
According to Laurence Perrine and Thomas Arp, the blackbird in John Galsworthy's "The Japanese Quince" is not symbolically significant: it is "simply" a "part of the tree symbol," the "song at the tree's heart, the expression of lyric ecstasy." Galsworthy, they say, "has chosen a blackbird simply because the English blackbird ... is a rich singer and would be found in London in the spring.'' In the June 1971 issue of Research Studies, Roger Ramsey presents "another way of looking at [the] blackbird" in "The Japanese Quince." Ramsey relates the blackbird to the "empty feeling in...
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