@article{oai:miyazaki-mu.repo.nii.ac.jp:00001091, author = {中山, 本文 and NAKAYAMA, Motofumi}, issue = {1}, journal = {宮崎公立大学人文学部紀要, Bulletin of Miyazaki Municipal University Faculty of Humanities}, month = {Mar}, note = {Lawrence and Wilde found something special in "blood." Lawrence had a firm belief in "blood" symbolizing primitive "daemonic" energy. Lawrence's blood operates as energy to encourage one to transcend individuality and acquire "a greater life." With profound insight, he asserts that an invisible world of "blood-consciousness" underlies the visible world. Wilde too stresses "blood" as seen in "The Nightingale and the Rose," "The Happy Prince." or "The Selfish Giant." The "blood," which is inseparable from death, is without fail shed for the sake of others; it is the so-called sacrificial one. He sees beauty and truth in the moment life speakles at its maximum. Both of them turn their eyes to and recognize great values in things invisible, which the "blood" represents. They were distrustful of society in which they lived, and irritated with the people who belived in practical worth or who are always self-consious, never forgetting themselves. Almost all their works serve as critique of the times in which they lived. The "blood" they describe is different in quality, but they are in common in that they find in the "blood" great significance and a clue to the truth of life which is usually unseen on the surface of ordinary life.}, pages = {197--212}, title = {"Blood" in D.H. Lawrence and O. Wilde}, volume = {22}, year = {2015}, yomi = {ナカヤマ, モトフミ} }