This section contains 1,937 words (approx. 7 pages at 300 words per page) |
SOURCE: “Michel de Ghelderode: A Personal Statement,” in Tulane Drama Review, Vol. 8, No. 1, Fall 1963, pp. 33-38.
In the following review, Draper presents a personal portrait of Ghelderode to gain greater understanding of his work.
The masks Ghelderode wore for the world were in many ways unfortunate because they alienated him from his contemporaries. His weird poses frightened many admirers away, denying them the happiness of knowing Ghelderode personally. That Ghelderode's art has a secure place in modern dramatic literature is almost universally agreed. That he was an affectionate, exemplary friend, a lovable man, that he possessed a droll sense of humor, incarnated hard work and literary discipline à la Voltaire and Balzac without being spoiled by worldly success, and that he was a pauper most of his life—all this is known only to a small group of friends. They include several Belgians, a few Frenchmen, one or two...
This section contains 1,937 words (approx. 7 pages at 300 words per page) |