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Oscar Wilde, His Life and Confessions

Chapter 9 

Word Count: 2388    |    Released on: 19/11/2017

Success: Osc

nd blizzard. Summer comes like a goddess; in a twinkling the snow vanishes and Nature puts on her robes of tenderest green; the birds arrive in flocks; flowers spri

ory which shows Oscar Wilde's influence over men who were anything but literary in their tastes. Mr. Beckett had a party of Yorkshire squires, chiefly fox-hunters and lovers of an outdoor life, at Kirkstall Grange when he heard that Oscar Wilde was in the neighbouring town of Leeds. Immediately he asked him to lunch at the Grange, chuckling to himself beforeha

ll the papers were put down and everyone h

the party broke up in the small hours they all went away delighted with Oscar, vowing that no man ever talked more brilliantly. Grimthorpe cannot remembe

amous talkers of the past, Coleridge, Macaulay, Carlyle and the others, were all lecturers: talk to them was a discourse on a favourite theme, and in ordinary life they were generally regarded as bores. But at his best Oscar Wilde never dropp

ng, and in constant demand, he still read omnivorously,

Boswell's "Life of Johnson" being the other two. It was strange, he thought, that the greatest man had written the worst biography; Plato made of Socrates a mere phonograph, into which he talked his own theories: Renan did better work, and Boswel

onsummate painters than Boswell, though they, too, left a great deal too much to the imagination. L

st for Oscar; he was always weaving li

had always had the strongest attraction for me, and so

tumbled over the miracles and came to grief. Claus Sluter's head of Jesus in the museum of Dijon is a finer portrait, and so is the imaginative picture of Fra Ange

to enjoy the jarring antinomy which resulted. One or two of his stories were surprising in ironical suggesti

t thy grief must be, for certainly that Man was a just Man.' But the young man made answer, 'Oh, it is not for that I am weeping. I am weeping because I too have wrought miracles. I also have given si

ife-story of genius for all time, eternally true. He never looked outside himself, and as the fruits of success were now sweet in his mouth, a pursuing Fate seemed to him the most mythical of myths. His child-like self-confidence was pathetic. The laws that govern human affairs had little interest for the man who w

ry of the Man of Sorrows who had sounded all the depths of suffering. Just when he himself was about to enter the Dark Valley, Jesus w

best

wore earth

inclined to show it. Habitually he lived in humorous talk, in the epithets

ce that he was about to try a new ex

rd "lose" at the

en lose our characters; but we must never lose our temper. That is ou

I asked, smiling, "or in an articl

been bothering me to write a play for some time and I've got an idea I rather like. I wonder can I do it in a week, or will it take three? It ought not to ta

vancing him £100 before the scenario was even outlined. A couple of months later he told me that Alexande

s how I get all the names of my personages, Frank. I take up a map of the English counties, and there they are. Our English villages have often

first act was as old as the hills, but the treatment gave charm to it if not freshness. The delightful, unexpected humour set off the com

found the critics in much the same mind. There was an

unreal." Seeing that I did

you thi

u critics to an

's own peculiar way, 'Little promise

r's way," I retorted. "It is the l

ed Knight, "you cannot

ble of judging original work. They seem to live in a sort of fog, waiting for someone to

t at any of the rehearsals; but so far it is surely the

ck and stared at me; t

w. "'Lady Windermere's Fan' better than any comedy o

y, too, it is on a higher intellectual level. I can only compare it to the best of Congreve, and I think it's better." With

ournalist, and their judgment was that it was a most brilliant and interesting play. Though the humour was often

. The house rose at him and cheered and cheered again. He was smiling, with

like my play.9 I feel sure you estimate the

Some clever Jewesses and, strange to say, one Scotchman were the loudest in applause. Mr. Archer, the well-known critic of The World, was the first and only journalist to perceive that the play was a classic by vi

and The Times, for example, were poisonously puritanic, but thinking people came over to his side in a body. The halo of fame was about him, and the incense of it in his nostrils made him more charming, more irresponsibly gay, more genial-wit

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Oscar Wilde, His Life and Confessions
Oscar Wilde, His Life and Confessions
“This book provides an introduction by J. H. Stape, St. Mary's University College, Strawberry Hill.Written in 1910 and first privately published in New York in 1916, Frank Harris' "Oscar Wilde: His Life and Confessions" gained almost instant notoriety. Attacked by critics for its extravagant inventions, vigorously defended by George Bernard Shaw and hauled into court for libel by Wilde's friend and lover, Lord Alfred Douglas, Harris' biography was published in England only in 1938.Famously inaccurate and lavishly self-serving, Harris' study none the less offers a highly evocative portrait of a compelling personality - or rather of two personalities, for Harris never shies from enlarging upon his roles as Wilde's defender, adviser, and sometime friend. Impressionistic, vivid and well-paced, Harris' intimate account of Wilde's rise and fall will fascinate anyone with an interest in a dramatist and poet whose tempestuous, and ultimately tragic, life was his true major work. A serious contender, as one commentator put it, if there were an Olympic gold for lying, Harris provides as near as one gets in biography to a 'page-turner'.”
1 Introduction2 Chapter 13 Chapter 24 Chapter 35 Chapter 46 Chapter 57 Chapter 68 Chapter 79 Chapter 810 Chapter 911 Chapter 1012 Chapter 1113 Chapter 1214 Chapter 1315 Chapter 1416 Chapter 1517 Chapter 1618 Chapter 1719 Chapter 1820 Chapter 1921 Chapter 2022 Chapter 2123 Chapter 2224 Chapter 2325 Chapter 2426 Chapter 2527 Chapter 26 The End28 Chapter 2729 Memories of Oscar Wilde By G. Bernard Shaw Introduction30 Appendix31 The Unpublished Portion of "De Profundis"32 Oscar Wilde's Kindness of Heart33 My Coldness Towards Oscar in 189734 The Mystery of Personality35 The Dedication of "An Ideal Husband"36 Mrs. Wilde's Epitaph37 Sonnet38 The Story of "Mr. And Mrs. Daventry"39 Oscar's Last Days!40 Criticisms By Robert Ross41 The Soul of Man Under Socialism42 A Last Word43 The End