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The Secret Life of Oscar Wilde

Page 70

by Neil McKenna


  `hearty salutations': Ellmann, page 167.

  `Walt Whitman will be in': Ellmann, page 167.

  `I have come to you': Interviews and Recollections, volume I, page 47.

  `If you are willing': Schmidgall, Walt Whitman, page 286.

  "`thee and thou" terms': Interviews and Recollections, volume I, pages 46-47.

  `We had a jolly good time': Interviews and Recollections, volume I, page 46.

  `Everyone who knew Whitman': Harrison Reeves, Mercure de France, 1 June 1913.

  `he just resented': George Ives, 19 November 1893, HRC.

  `I have the kiss': George Ives, 6 January 1901, in John Stokes, Oscar Wilde: Myths, Miracles and Imitations (Oxford, 1996), page 69.

  `Unto thy martyrdom': Winwar, Oscar Wilde and the Yellow Nineties, page 70.

  `There is none': Symons, Essays and Biographies, page 177.

  `too effusive': Pearson, The Life q f Oscar Wilde, page 71.

  `Among the "many young men"': Ellmann, page 200.

  `Have you read the Saturday': Ellmann, page 200.

  `My friends criticised': Pearson, The Life q f Oscar Wilde, page 64.

  `the true poet': Ellmann, pages 212-213.

  `I send you the young Greek': Letters, page 176.

  `a lovely bas-relief': Letters, page 228.

  `by a thin-faced youth': Pearson, The Life of Oscar Wilde, page 83.

  `America is a land': Hyde, Oscar Wilde, page 81.

  Freedom from sordid care

  `The proper basis for marriage': Works, page 163.

  `Are you in love?': Melville, Mother of Oscar, page 180.

  `Miss Ward Howe': Violet Hunt, 21 November 1882, in Secor, `Aesthetes and Pre-Raphaelites', page 399.

  `praised Constance immensely': Lady Wilde to Oscar Wilde, 1882, in Melville, Mother q f Oscar, page 181.

  `I think she would kill you': Otho Holland Lloyd to Nellie Hutchinson, 28 February 1883, in Melville, Mother of Oscar, page 187.

  `At present I am deep': Letters, pages 204-205.

  `mes premieres fleurs': Letters, page 207.

  `cet individu': Hyde, Oscar Wilde, page 85.

  `honey-coloured': Letters, page 211.

  `suppurating syphilitic sores': Kevin H.F. O'Brien, `Robert Sherard', English Literature in Transition, volume XXVIII, number 1, page 10.

  `moonlit meanderings': Letters, page 210.

  `How could I refuse': Letters, page 210.

  `Priapus was calling': H. Montgomery Hyde, Famous Trials 7: Oscar Wilde (London, 1962), pages 53-54.

  `The only reflection': Robert Sherard to A.J.A. Symons, 3 June 1937, in Belford, Oscar Wilde, page 117.

  `He is grown': Laura Troubridge, July 1883, in Troubridge, Life Among the Troubridges,

  page 164.

  `His amber-coloured hair': Richard Le Gallienne, The Romantic '90s (London, 1951), page 141.

  `You will think': Otho Holland Lloyd to Nellie Hutchinson, May 1883, in Melville, Mother of Oscar, page 188.

  `I don't believe that he means': Otho Holland Lloyd to Nellie Hutchinson, June 1883, in Melville, Mother of Oscar, page 189.

  `wherever she went': Otho Holland Lloyd to Nellie Hutchinson, June 1883, in Melville, Mother of Oscar, page 190.

  `If the man were': Otho Holland Lloyd to Nellie Hutchinson, June 1883, in Melville, Mother of Oscar, page 190.

  `this is his way': Otho Holland Lloyd to Nellie Hutchinson, June 1883, in Melville, Mother of Oscar, page 189.

  `an epicene youth': Ellmann, page 240.

  `You know everybody says': Ellmann, page 236.

  `I am afraid you and I': Ellmann, page 244.

  `I told the Atkinsons': Ellmann, page 244.

  `though decidedly extra': Letters, page 221.

  `Such stupid nonsense': Letters, page 272.

  `Prepare yourself': Letters, page 222.

  `shaking with fright': Letters, page 221.

  `three good proposals': Bentley, The Importance of Being Constance, page 33.

  `Grandpapa will, I know, be nice': Letters, page 232.

  `I am so dreadfully nervous': Letters, page 222.

  `I won't stand opposition': Letters, page 222.

  `My father': Emily Lloyd to Oscar Wilde, 30 November 1883, Clark Library.

  `I am intensely pleased': Melville, Mother of Oscar, pages 191-192.

  `growing quite rich': Letters, page 224.

  `The best work in literature': Letters, page 265.

  `I hear that Oscar's fiancee only has £400 a year': Laura Troubridge, 1884, in Secor,

  `Aesthetes and Pre-Raphaelites', page 399.

  `as nearly as possible escaped': Hunt, The Flurried Years, page 168. `is not a matter for affection': Works, page 559.

  `A hundred and thirty thousand pounds!': Works, page 409.

  `a very nice, pretty, sensible girl': Lady Wilde to Mrs Knott, February 1884, in Melville, Mother of Oscar, page 194.

  `What causes him some uneasiness': Emily Lloyd to Oscar Wilde, 6 December 1883, Clark Library.

  `He had an interview in chambers with Mr Hargrove': Otho Holland Lloyd to A.J.A. Symons, 27 May 1937, Clark Library.

  `I think it likely': Emily Lloyd to Oscar Wilde, 17 December 1883, Clark Library.

  `should be made to understand': Emily Lloyd to Oscar Wilde, 17 December 1883, Clark Library.

  The marriage cure

  `LADY BRACKNELL: To speak frankly': Works, page 410.

  `He certainly had been very much': Lord Alfred Douglas, The Autobiography q f Lord Alfred Douglas (London, 1929), pages 59-60.

  `force and depth of character': Bentley, The Importance of Being Constance, page 87.

  `I'm going to be married to': Letters, page 224.

  `mystical': Letters, page 225.

  `Madonna Mia': Works, page 836.

  `a fair slim boy': Works, page 755.

  `Impervious as Cyprian was': Andre Raffalovich, A Willing Exile (London, 1890), page 20.

  `It was not love': Raffalovich, A Willing Exile, page 22.

  `marrying that girl': Ellmann, page 235.

  `can't help liking him': Letters, page 221.

  `She scarcely ever speaks': Louise Jopling, Tventy Years of My Life 1867-1887 (London, 1925), page 79.

  `It is horrid': Letters, page 224-225.

  `I am with Oscar when': Letters, page 225.

  `My darling love': Constance Lloyd to Oscar Wilde, in Winwar, Oscar Wilde and the Yellow Nineties, pages 126-127.

  `all very pretty indeed': Letters, pages 21-22.

  `a very good age': Works, page 368.

  `When I have you': Constance Lloyd to Oscar Wilde, in Winwar, Oscar Wilde and the Yellow Nineties, page 127.

  `certainly the most immoral': W.H. Auden, Forewords andAftervords, inAn Improbable Life, selected by Edward Mendelson (London), pages 307-308.

  `prayers, struggles, all means used': Havelock Ellis, Studies in the Psychology of Sex (Philadelphia, 1902), page 57.

  `was the excitation': Symonds, Memoirs, page 136.

  `there had been connection': Ellis, Studies in the Psychology of Sex, page 164.

  `I sought out a scarlet woman': Ellis, Studies in the Psychology q f Sex, page 74.

  `used to dream': Ellis, Studies in the Psychology of Sex, page-88.-

  `If only you were a boy': Melville, Mother of Oscar, page 264.

  `the boyish appearance': Schmidgall, The Stranger Wilde, page 106.

  `another means': Oscar Wilde and Others, Teleny (London, 1986), pages 86-87.

  `the slender lithesomeness': Wilde and Others, Teleny, page 87.

  `Could I but have felt': Wilde and Others, Teleny, page 87.

  `youthful': Anne Amor Clark, Mrs Oscar Wilde (London, 1983), page 59.

  `You say you love': Alan Sheridan, Andre Gide: A Life in the Present (London, 1998), page 129.

  `Physicians are often strongly tempted': Ellis, Studies in the Psychology o fSex, page 198.

  'I felt the necessity': Symonds, Memoirs, page 135.

  `recommended cohab
itation': Symonds, Memoirs, page 152.

  `great mistake - perhaps the great crime': Symonds, Memoirs, pages 184-185.

  I married without passion': Symonds, Memoirs, page 185.

  `found, to his disappointment': Ellis, Studies in the Psychology q f Sex, page 88.

  `Bachelors are not fashionable': Works, page 556.

  `There is only this much': Sherard, Life of Oscar Wilde, page 233.

  `No woman': Sherard, Life of Oscar Wilde.

  Against nature

  `The only way to behave to a woman': Works, page 371.

  `a silly and thoroughly characteristic letter': Ellmann, page 251.

  `stopped and rifled': Brasol, Oscar Wilde, page 176.

  `It's so wonderful': Robert Sherard to A.J.A. Symons, 3 June 1937, Clark Library.

  `I pointed out': Robert Sherard to A.J.A. Symons, 3 June 1937, Clark Library.

  `Such a great event': in Phyllis Grosskurth, John Addington Symonds (London, 1964), pages 94-95.

  `annulee et tendre': in Ellmann, page 252.

  `Of course I need not tell you': Letters, page 229.

  `the most splendid acting I ever saw': Letters, page 228.

  `the show-places of the Paris Inferno': Sherard, Oscar Wilde, page 94.

  `the saddest daughters of joy': Sherard, Oscar Wilde, page 96.

  `The criminal classes': Sherard, Oscar Wilde, page 95.

  `Stretched out in every posture of pain': Sherard, Oscar Wilde, pages 96-97.

  `the favourite spectacle': Sherard, Oscar Wilde, page 96.

  `the breviary of decadence': introduction to J.K. Huysmans, Against Nature, translated by Robert Baldick (London, 1959), page 13.

  `Bible and bedside book': Ellmann, page 252.

  `a sudden storm of wind and rain': Letters, page 227.

  `Dear Sir, the book': Letters, page 524.

  `taking up the volume': Works, page 96.

  `After a few minutes': Works, page 98.

  `progressively less manly': Huysmans, Against Nature, page 17.

  `In the days when he had belonged': Huysmans, Against Nature, pages 22-23.

  `a young scamp of sixteen or so': Huysmans, Against Nature, page 80.

  `has a supple figure, sinewy legs': Huysmans, Against Nature, page 110.

  `as blunt-witted and brutish': Huysmans, Against Nature, page 112.

  `yearning for her': Huysmans, Against Nature, page 111.

  `rough, athletic caresses': Huysmans, Against Nature, page 112.

  `timid and appealing': Huysmans, Against Nature, page 116.

  'This last book of Huysmans': Morning News, 20 June 1884.

  `The whole book seemed to him': Works, page 97.

  An ideal wife

  `What nonsense people talk': Works, page 131.

  `I am thinking of becoming': Letters, page 230.

  `What should be the distinguishing': on display at Oscar Wilde: A Life in Six Acts, British Library, London, 2000.

  `the divine joy of sacrifice': Melville, Mother of Oscar, pages 65-66.

  `A woman has a strong tendency': Melville, Mother of Oscar, page 69.

  `It is better to have loved and lost': Coakley, Oscar Wilde, page 178.

  `more of a sedative': Wilde and Others, Teleny, page 58.

  `succeeded in accomplishing': Symonds, Sexual Inversion, pages 168-169.

  `Did you see the Wildes': diary of Laura Hope, 8 June 1886, in P. Jullien, `The Wildes at No 16 Tite Street', London Magazine, volume IX, page 70.

  `Mr and Mrs Oscar Wilde to tea': diary of Laura Troubridge, 8 July 1884, Life Among the Troubridges, page 169.

  `Oscar Wilde and his wife': Adrian Hope and Laura Troubridge, Letters of Engagement, edited by Marie-Jaqueline Lancaster (London, 2002), page 38.

  `Mrs Oscar Wilde is utterly devoid': Marie Corelli, in Clark, Mrs Oscar Wilde, page 73.

  `Burne-Jones and': Marion Mainwaring, Mysteries ofParis (London, 2001), page 45.

  `so cold and undemonstrative outwardly': Ellmann, page 246.

  `said during dinner': Hope and Troubridge, Letters of Engagement, page 115.

  `simply revolting': Hope and Troubridge, Letters of Engagement, page 117.

  `a pretty young woman': Le Gallienne, The Romantic '90s, page 144.

  `She was sentimental': Arthur Ransome, Oscar Wilde: A Critical Study (London, 1912), page 36.

  `I knew a case': Ada Leverson, in Julie Speedie, Wonderful Sphinx (London, 1993), pages 87-88.

  `How passionately I worship': Ellmann, page 246.

  `really very fond': Letters, page 785.

  `There is only one thing': Coakley, Oscar Wilde, page 178.

  `She could not understand me': Letters, page 785.

  `Ennui is the enemy!': Letters, page 1131.

  `Women are always on the side of morality': Works, page 469.

  `the only way a woman': Works, page 80.

  `Then turning to my love I said': Works, page 867.

  `When I married': Harris, Oscar Wilde, page 284.

  `Ugliness I consider a malady': Sherard, Oscar Wilde, page 57.

  `I can sympathise': Works, page 42.

  `Pity! Pity has nothing to do with love': Harris, Oscar Wilde, page 285.

  `many men find': Andre Raffalovich, Uranisme et Unisexualite (Lyon, 1896), page 125, translated by Sian Jones.

  `must love indeed': Wilde and Others, Teleny, page 131.

  `Don't talk to me of the other sex': Harris, Oscar Wilde, page 270.

  `Oscar had no illusions': Robert Sherard to A.J.A. Symons, 31 May 1937, Hyde Collection.

  `Act dishonourably, Robert': Robert Sherard to A.J.A. Symons, 31 May 1937, Hyde Collection.

  `glutted their lust': Hyde, Oscar Wilde, page 183.

  `Mr Wilde told me': Hyde, Famous Trials 7, page 185.

  `Mr Wilde spoke several times': Hyde, Famous Trials 7, page 185.

  `A woman's passion': Harris, Oscar Wilde, page 272.

  `Get hence, you loathsome Mystery!': Works, page 882.

  `Her thighs were bare': Wilde and Others, Teleny, page 80.

  `I am afraid that women appreciate cruelty': Works, page 82.

  Playing with fire

  `Marriage is a sort of forcing-house': Robert Hichens, The Green Carnation (London, 1961), page 30.

  `Dear and Beloved': Letters, pages 241-242.

  `best Olympian': Ellmann, page 265.

  `My dear Philip': Letters, page 239.

  `Yes. I always call': Hyde, Famous Trials 7, page 125.

  `charmed. 1have a very vivid': Letters, page 266.

  `Harry, why did you let me': Letters, page 267.

  `I find the earth as beautiful as the sky': Letters, page 267.

  `you have the power': Letters, page 268.

  `Do you know him?': Letters, page 268.

  `There is no sin': Timothy d'Arch Smith, Love in Earnest (London, 1970), page 77.

  `What is Harry doing?': Letters, page 269.

  `What is your real ambition in life': Interviews and Recollections, volume I, page 5.

  `Nothing is good in moderation': Ellmann, page 268.

  `Enough is as bad as a meal': Pearson, The Life of Oscar Wilde, page 171.

  `Moderation is a fatal thing': Works, page 498.

  `Does it all seem a dream, Harry?': Letters, page 269.

  `How much more poetic': Pearson, The Life o f Oscar Wilde, page 79.

  `You too have the love': Letters, page 272.

  `not the fruit of experience': Ellmann, page 139.

  `I wanted to eat of the fruit': Letters, page 739.

  `most fiery moment of ecstasy': Letters, page 272.

  `Strangely enough': Letters, page 272.

  `To be master of these moods is exquisite': Letters, page 272.

  `To drift with every passion till my soul': Works, page 864.

  `an unknown land full of strange flowers': Letters, page 272.

  `Let us live like Spartans': Letters, page 274.

  `Come at 12 o'c on Sunday': Letters, page 276.

&n
bsp; `Dear Douglas, I have lost your note': Letters, page 281.

  `We must have many evenings together': Letters, page 281.

  `I hope you and Osborne are reading hard': Letters, page 281.

  `young Oxonians are very delightful': Letters, page 278.

  Mad and coloured loves

  `Love is all very well': Works, page 286.

  `Oscar's star has been low': Ellmann, page 281.

  `Give me the luxuries': Harris, Oscar Wilde, page 36.

  `A word from you': Letters, page 280.

  `In mad and coloured loves': Ian Small, Oscar Wilde Revalued (Buckinghamshire, 1993), page 131.

  `consistency is the last refuge': Oscar Wilde, `The Relation of Dress to Art', in The Artist as Critic, edited by Richard Ellmann (Chicago, 1982).

  `the best writer in Europe': Jean Graham Hall and Gordon D. Smith, Oscar Wilde: The Tragedy of Being Earnest (Chichester, 2001), page 33.

  `epicene youth': Truth, 18 July 1883.

  `I have never seen anything like it before': Neil Bartlett, Who Was That Man? (London, 1988), pages 136-137.

  `on the increase': H. Montgomery Hyde, The Cleveland Street Scandal (London, 1976), page 17.

  `The increase of these monsters': Hyde, The Other Love, page 120. `a criminal confederacy': Hyde, The Other Love, page 129.

  `a disgrace to legislation': John Addington Symonds to Charles Karns Jackson, 18 December 1892, in John Addington Symonds, Letters, edited by Herbert M. Schueller and Robert L. Peters (Detroit, 1969), page 791.

  `The only way to get rid of a temptation': Works, pages 28-29.

  `the face of Puck': Pearson, The Life of Oscar Wilde, pages 354-355.

  `a rather pathetic-looking little creature': Douglas, Autobiography, page 70.

  `had known Ross': new preface to Frank Harris and Lord Alfred Douglas, The Life and Confessions of Oscar Wilde (London, 1925), pages 49-50.

  `copping for a steamer': Rupert Croft-Cooke, Feasting with Panthers (London, 1968), page 264.

  `flattery laid on with a trowel': Douglas, Autobiography, pages 72-73.

  Poets and lovers

  `How much more poetic': Pearson, The Life of Oscar Wilde, page 79.

  `highest form of literature': Letters, page 265.

  `too busy to lecture': Letters, page 304.

 

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