A Study of Oscar Wilde |
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Page 14
... exalting him beyond his merits on literary grounds , and the insincere romanticism which flowered in Salome and the poems and so many of the essays is taken on ( ) trust as if the personal tragedy had tran- substantiated it 14.
... exalting him beyond his merits on literary grounds , and the insincere romanticism which flowered in Salome and the poems and so many of the essays is taken on ( ) trust as if the personal tragedy had tran- substantiated it 14.
Page 15
Arthur Symons. trust as if the personal tragedy had tran- substantiated it into truth and sincerity . Such are the perils of the arts in England ; so helplessly does the pendulum swing . How many people over here will ever realise that ...
Arthur Symons. trust as if the personal tragedy had tran- substantiated it into truth and sincerity . Such are the perils of the arts in England ; so helplessly does the pendulum swing . How many people over here will ever realise that ...
Page 68
Arthur Symons. tine Tragedy , we see an attempt to write romantic drama . The end of The Florentine Tragedy is done on almost the same method as the end of the third act of Lady Windermere's Fan . It is meant to be a great climax , and ...
Arthur Symons. tine Tragedy , we see an attempt to write romantic drama . The end of The Florentine Tragedy is done on almost the same method as the end of the third act of Lady Windermere's Fan . It is meant to be a great climax , and ...
Common terms and phrases
1.3.94 GAYLORD PRINTED actor æsthetic Alfred Douglas art's sake-it ARTHUR SYMONS Author artist attitude Ballad of Reading Baudelaire beauty Bianca bourgeois seriousness certainly Coleridge or Turner colour comedy conscious critic death decadence of Dorian dialogue Dorian Gray Douglas ence England English enriched its characterisation epigram essay Eugene Aram expression farce Frank Harris genius Harris Henley's horror human imagination imitates intellect kind Lady Windermere's Fan least lines lips literary live lyric man's Marquis ment moods natural nerves never NUMBERED COPIES objective form known Oscar Wilde paradox passage passion for caprice phrase play poem poet poetry Prince Paul prison Profundis prose punishment Reading Gaol realise Salome says seems sentence sorrow soul speech stage stanzas strophes are ordinarily STUDY OF OSCAR subtle decadence Swinburne theatre things third act Thomas Hardy thought tragedy truth of masks Villiers de l'Isle-Adam Voltaire Walter Pater Wilde's witty words writer written wrote Yeats