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Oscar Wilde: Art and Morality Stuart Mason
Oscar Wilde: Art and Morality
Stuart Mason
"Why do you always write poetry? Why do you not write prose? Prose is so much more difficult." These were the words of Walter Pater to Oscar Wilde on the occasion of their first meeting during the latter's undergraduate days at Oxford. Those were "days of lyrical ardours and of studious sonnet-writing," wrote Wilde, in reviewing one of Pater's books some years later, "days when one loved the exquisite intricacy and musical repetitions of the ballade, and the vilanelle with its linked long-drawn echoes and its curious completeness; days when one solemnly sought to discover the proper temper in which a triolet should be written; delightful days, in which, I am glad to say, there was far more rhyme than reason." Oscar Wilde was never a voluminous writer?"writing bores me so," he once said to André Gide?and at the time of which he speaks he had published little except some occasional verses in his University magazines. Then, in 1881, came his volume of collected poems, followed at intervals during the next nine or ten years by a collection of fairy stories and some essays in the leading reviews.
| Media | Books Paperback Book (Book with soft cover and glued back) |
| Released | April 15, 2014 |
| ISBN13 | 9781499151336 |
| Publishers | CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platf |
| Pages | 66 |
| Dimensions | 150 × 4 × 226 mm · 99 g |
| Language | English |
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