The Secret Life of Oscar Wilde

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The Secret Life of Oscar Wilde Page 74

by Neil McKenna


  `corrupting the youth': Max Beerbohm's Letters to Reggie Turner, page 290.

  `preaching corruption': Raffalovich, Uranisme et Unisexualite, page 248, translated by Sian Jones.

  `a young man with a promising career': d'Arch Smith, Love in Earnest, page 187.

  `the tiniest rivulet of text': Sewell, In the Dorian Mode, page 40.

  `Oscar Wilde has been charming': Pierre Lout's to Georges Lout's, 22 April 1893, in Ellmann, page 393.

  `fatal connection': Hull McCormack, John Gray, page 106.

  `I wanted to have a friend': Fryer, Andre & Oscar, page 67.

  that sexual relations': Backhouse, `The Dead Past'.

  `better, saner, finer philosophy': Hyde, Oscar Wilde, page 155.

  `a mock marriage': Backhouse, `The Dead Past'.

  Brazen candour

  `Really, if the lower orders': Works, page 358.

  `Ossian Savage': Interviews and Recollections, volume I, pages 221-222.

  `missing word competition': Mason, Art and Morality, page 22.

  `a peculiarly plain boy': Holland, Irish Peacock and Scarlet Marquess, pages 207-208.

  `private parts': statement of Walter Grainger, 1895, witness statements, private collection.

  `placed his penis': statement of Walter Grainger, 1895, witness statements, private collection.

  `very serious trouble': statement of Walter Grainger, 1895, witness statements, private collection.

  `I really don't care twopence': d'Arch Smith, Love in Earnest, page 53.

  `under the circumstances': Letters, page 702.

  `acted as before to me': statement of Walter Grainger, 1895, witness statements, private collection.

  `frightened': statement of Walter Grainger, 1895, witness statements, private collection.

  `the fun of being with Oscar': Croft-Cooke, Bosie, page 364.

  `I have done no work here': Letters, page 566.

  `finding that life in meadow and stream': Letters, page 567.

  `You've no idea the sort of face': Harris, Oscar Wilde, page 104.

  peculiar': statement of Gertrude Simmonds, 1895, witness statements, private collection.

  `Much to my surprise Mr Wilde': statement of Gertrude Simmonds, 1895, witness statements, private collection.

  `punch him': statement of Ernest Mitchelmore, 1895, witness statements, private collection.

  `The morning of the day': Letters, page 692.

  `sullenly': Letters, page 692.

  `four wire baskets filled': Oscar Wilde's Bankruptcy Proceedings, High Court of Bankruptcy, B9/428, PRO.

  `Ross was by way of being devoted': Douglas, Autobiography, pages 70-71.

  `Freddie is the one friend': Robert Ross to Christopher Millard, 6 September 1913, in Maureen Borland, Wilde's Devoted Friend: A Life of Robert Ross 1869-1918 (Oxford, 1990), page 194.

  `slender, attractive, impulsive boy': Douglas, Autobiography, page 71.

  `one of my greatest friends': Lord Alfred Douglas to Percy Douglas, `The Constant Nymph', Maggs Brothers Limited, no date.

  `contains a great deal': Ricketts, Self-Portrait, page 124.

  `a woman of grave, Greek beauty': Works, page 515.

  `Suppose when I leave': Works, page 529.

  `Yours is a very nasty scandal': Works, page 528.

  `He and I are closer than friends': Works, page 551.

  `the game of life': Works, page 528.

  `high character, high moral tone, high principles': Works, page 577.

  `my secret and my shame': Works, page 562.

  `Do you think that it is weakness': Works, page 538.

  `pitiless in her perfection': Works, page 561.

  `The ten commandments': Works, page 558.

  any secret dishonour or disgrace': Works, page 534.

  `Women are not meant to judge us': Works, page 579.

  A pugilist of unsound mind

  `The basis of every scandal': Works, page 472.

  `we shall have you Prime Minister': Works, page 581.

  `a man of forty': Works, page 518.

  `a nervous temperament': Works, page 518.

  `A personality of mark': Works, page 518.

  `firmly-chiselled mouth': Works, page 518.

  `undisciplined temper': Lord Acton to George Murray, Whit Sunday 1892, bundle 1674, Atholl Archive, Blair Castle.

  `an excellent, amiable young man': Murray, Bosie, page 66.

  `brightness and good temper': George Murray to Lord Acton, 19 October 1894, MS10049, National Library of Scotland, Edinburgh.

  `cultured, charming and generous': Backhouse, `The Dead Past'.

  `there was something very winning': Sir Edward Walter Hamilton, 19 October 1894, BL Add MSS 48665, British Library.

  `he was much liked': Sir Edward Walter Hamilton, 19 October 1894, BL Add MSS 48665, British Library.

  `the most loveable youth': Arthur Ellis to Lord Rosebery, 22 October 1894, MS 10049, National Library of Scotland.

  `every boy of good looks': Symonds, Memoirs, page 94.

  `little bandbox': Robert Rhodes James, Rosebery (London, 1985), page 56.

  `devoted': Brian Roberts, The Mad Bad Line: The Family of Lord Alfred Douglas (London, 1981), page 159.

  `became attracted': Backhouse, `The Dead Past'.

  `Like the Arabs and the Ottomans': Backhouse, `The Dead Past'.

  `considering some of the things': Lewis Harcourt, 1891, in Roberts, The Mad Bad Line, pages 184-185.

  'Brookfield's zeal in the pursuit of homosexuals': H. Montgomery Hyde to Rupert

  Hart-Davis, 27 May 1967, HRC.

  `One eminent personage': `Xavier Mayne' (pseudonym), The Intersexes: A History of Similisexualism as a Problem in Social Life (Rome, 1908), page 237.

  `soiree': Backhouse, `The Dead Past'.

  `the very eccentric': Backhouse, `The Dead Past'.

  `homosexual to the fingertips': Backhouse, `The Dead Past'.

  `Lord Douglas took me aside': Backhouse, `The Dead Past'.

  `He was extremely and ideally handsome': Backhouse, `The Dead Past'.

  `Lord Queensberry was for the moment furious': diary of Sir Algernon West, 5 June 1893, in Roberts, The Mad Bad Line, page 160.

  `Scarlet Marquis': Letters, page 621.

  `I have quite given up': Roberts, The Mad Bad Line, page 157.

  `drunken, declasse and half-witted': Letters, page 707.

  `Any possibility there may have been': Rhodes James, Rosebery, page 300.

  `the paramount influence': Backhouse, `The Dead Past'.

  `Many scandalous anonymous letters': Backhouse, `The Dead Past'.

  `Cher Fat Boy': Queensberry to Lord Rosebery, 22 August 1893, MS 10170 f255, National Library of Scotland. ---- --- ----- ----

  `Jew nancy boy': Queensberry to Lord Rosebery, 22 August 1893, MS 10170 f255, National Library of Scotland.

  `peerage business': Queensberry toy Lord Rosebery, 22 August 1893, MS 10170 f255, National Library of Scotland. ---- --- -----

  `I have a punching ball': Queensberry to Lord Rosebery, 22 August 1893, MS 10170 f255, National Library of Scotland.

  `The Marquis of Queensberry, in consequence': Rhodes James, Rosebery, page 287.

  `It is a material and unpleasant': Rhodes James, Rosebery, page 287.

  `God help the country': Queensberry to Lord Rosebery, 22 August 1893, MS 10170 f255, National Library of Scotland.

  A schoolboy with wonderful eyes

  `Little boys should be obscene': Interviews and Recollections, volume II, page 373.

  `rich clusters of vine leaves': Murray, Bosie, page 49.

  `Nor have I ever seen Oscar': Max Beerbohm's Letters to Reginald Turner, page 53.

  `scenes': Letters, page 692.

  `I suspected that': Lord Alfred Douglas, Without Apology.

  ,no intellectual obligation': Letters, page 692.

  the one really true thing': Letters, page 692.

  `Ultimately the bond': Letters, page 692.

  `trivial in thought and ac
tion': Letters, page 692.

  `The froth and folly': Letters, page 692.

  `the eternal quest for beauty': Lord Alfred Douglas to Charles Karns Jackson, 9 April 1894, in Hyde, Lord Alfred Douglas, page 55.

  `a malady, or a madness, or both': Letters, page 730.

  `You were extremely angry': Letters, page 692.

  `But in reality, I could not': Letters, page 693.

  `a good opportunity': Letters, page 693.

  `I have just finished translating': Lord Alfred Douglas to Charles Karns Jackson, 31 August 1893, HRC.

  `The general philistine attacks': Lord Alfred Douglas to Charles Karns Jackson, 10

  September 1893, HRC.

  `I am bored to death': Lord Alfred Douglas to Charles Kains Jackson, 31 August 1893, HRC.

  `What I said about the `Straw Hat": Lord Alfred Douglas to Charles Kains Jackson, 10 September 1893, HRC.

  Straw Hat, No Band (for Friend)': Janet Taylor and Kenneth Cliff, `Mr Lock: Hatter to Oscar Wilde and Associates', The Wildean, number 22 (January 2003), page 21.

  `and I saw thee': Lord Alfred Douglas, `A Port in the Aegean', in Murray, Bosie, page 50.

  `I was so fascinated by the expression': Lord Alfred Douglas to Charles Kains Jackson, 31 August 1893, HRC.

  `I am held fast by the lassoo of desire': Lord Alfred Douglas to Robbie Ross, 11 February 1895, Hyde Collection.

  `really very fond': Letters, page 785.

  `no matter what you wrote': Letters, page 693.

  `It was represented to me': Letters, page 693.

  'March '93, for Aubrey': Matthew Sturgis, Aubrey Beardsley: A Biography (London, 1998), pages 131-132.

  `the most monstrous of orchids': Interviews and Recollections, volume II, page 270.

  `Absinthe is to all other drinks': Harris, Oscar Wilde, page 75.

  `certain forms of crime': Max Beerbohm to Reginald Turner, 10 October 1892, in Max Beerbohm's Letters to Reggie Turner, page 26.

  `Yes, yes, I look like a sodomite': Belford, Oscar Wilde, pages 204-205.

  `made advances to upwards': Ellis, Studies in the Psychology q f Sex, page 15.

  `advances on Beardsley': Robert Sherard to A.J.A. Symons, 31 May 1937, Hyde Collection.

  `boasted of having had': Backhouse, `The Dead Past'.

  `I don't mind his morals': Backhouse, `The Dead Past'.

  `Sales sont tes parties secretes': Backhouse, `The Dead Past'.

  `like a mad woman': Works, page 592.

  `like the naughty scribbles': Paul Raymond and Charles Ricketts, Oscar Wilde: Recollections (London, 1932), page 52.

  `used to inspect': Backhouse, `The Dead Past'.

  `I can tell you I had a warm time': Aubrey Beardsley to Robert Ross, late November 1893, in Aubrey Beardsley, Letters, edited by Henry Maas, J.L. Duncan and W.G. Good (London, 1970), page 58.

  `There have been very great': Max Beerbohm to Reginald Turner, 19 December 1893, in Max Beerbohm's Letters to Reggie Turner, page 84.

  `frequently': Biscoe Hale Wortham to Oscar Browning, 12 October 1893, ALS King's College.

  `a nice-looking, well-mannered': Biscoe Hale Wortham to Oscar Browning, 12 October 1893, ALS King's College.

  `there was something suspicious': Biscoe Hale Wortham to Oscar Browning, 12 October 1893, ALS King's College.

  `the desire of his soul': Max Beerbohm to Reginald Turner, 19 December 1893, in Max Beerbohm's Letters to Reggie Turner, page 84.

  `the letter contained the word "Boy"': Oscar Browning to Frank Harris, 3 November 1919, HRC.

  `On Saturday the boy slept': Oscar Browning to Frank Harris, 3 November 1919,

  HRC.

  `formed the acquaintance': Biscoe Hale Wortham to Oscar Browning, 12 October 1893, ALS King's College.

  `The schoolboy Helen': Max Beerbohm to Reginald Turner, 19 December 1893, in Max Beerbohm's Letters to Reggie Turner, page 84.

  a pretty sharp lookout': Biscoe Hale Wortham to Oscar Browning, 12 October 1893, ALS King's College.

  `left absolutely no doubt': Biscoe Hale Wortham to Oscar Browning, 12 October 1893, ALS King's College.

  `in its naked hideousness': Biscoe Hale Wortham to Oscar Browning, 12 October 1893, in Anstruther, Oscar Browning, pages 133-134.

  `I am miserable about poor Toddy': Mina Wortham to Oscar Browning, 16 October 1893, in Anstruther, Oscar Browning, page 135.

  `Ross is simply one of a gang': Biscoe Hale Wortham to Oscar Browning, 15 October 1893, in Borland, Wildes Devoted Friend, page 34.

  `Biscoe was surprised last evening': Mina Wortham to Oscar Browning, 16 October 1893, in Anstruther, Oscar Browning, page 135.

  `very unsatisfactory': Robert Ross to Oscar Browning, 16 October 1893, in Anstruther, Oscar Browning, pages 135-136.

  `It is frightfully dull here': Lord Alfred Douglas to Lord Percy Douglas, 16 October 1893, `The Constant Nymph', Maggs Brothers Limited, no date.

  `Please don't let Mamma': Lord Alfred Douglas to Lord Percy Douglas, 16 October 1893, `The Constant Nymph', Maggs Brothers Limited, no date.

  `decidedly ruffled': diary of George Ives, 19 October 1893, HRC.

  `The fact is that': Mina Wortham to Oscar Browning, 16 October 1893, in Anstruther, Oscar Browning, page 135.

  `Col. D- has been like many': Biscoe Hale Wortham to Oscar Browning, 25 October 1893, ALS King's College.

  `They will doubtless get two years': Oscar Browning to Frank Harris, 3 November 1919, HRC.

  `At length I am thankful': Biscoe Hale Wortham to Oscar Browning, 25 October 1893, in Anstruther, Oscar Browning, page 136.

  On a gilded barge

  `I don't think England': Works, page 467.

  `I am not allowed to live': Robert Ross to Lord Alfred Douglas, October 1893, in Borland, Wilde's Devoted Friend, pages 35-36.

  `blackmailing': Max Beerbohm's Letters to Reggie Turner, page 84.

  `going in for the wildest folly': William Rothenstein to Margaret Woods, 28 October 1893, in Hyde, Lord Alfred Douglas, page 47.

  `a long chat with OW.-1: diary of George Ives, 28 October 1893, HRC.

  `is sleepless, nervous': Letters, page 575.

  `Why not try and make arrangements': Letters, page 575.

  `knowledge and concurrence': Letters, page 694.

  `Douglas went to Egypt': Robert Ross to Frank Harris, 17 May 1914, HRC.

  `I understand that':-di - ary of George Ives, 29 November 1893, HRC.

  `the Sotadic Zone': Elaine Showalter, SexualAnarchy (Middlesex, 1990), pages 81-82.

  `classical region of all abominations': Richard Burton, Terminal Essay (London, 1885).

  `the highdried and highly respectable': Burton, Terminal Essay.

  `I want to ask if you': Lord Alfred Douglas to Charles Karns Jackson, 29 November 1893, HRC.

  `I am very unhappy': Lord Alfred Douglas to Charles Kains Jackson, 29 November 1893, HRC.

  `culminating in one': Letters, page 693.

  `I remember that afternoon': Letters, page 693.

  `The usual telegrams': Letters, page 693.

  `and under the influence': Letters, page 694.

  `darling': statement of Gertrude Simmonds, 1895, witness statements, private collection.

  with a sense of tragedy': Letters, page 934.

  `sadly and seriously trying': Letters, page 694.

  `I am happy in the knowledge': Letters, page 577.

  `ruining his soul': Lord Alfred Douglas to Lady Queensberry, 6 June 1894, in CroftCooke, Bosie, page 91.

  `I should also like to tell you': Lord Alfred Douglas to Lady Queensberry, 6 January 1894, in Croft-Cooke, Bosie, page 94.

  `I am passionately fond of him': Lord Alfred Douglas to Lady Queensberry, 10 December 1893, in Croft-Cooke, Bosie, page 92.

  `There is nothing I would not do': Lord Alfred Douglas to Lady Queensberry, ?March 1894, in Hyde, Oscar Wilde, page 167.

  `will be remembered and written about': Lord Alfred Douglas to Lady Queensberry, 10 December 1893, in Croft-Cooke, Bosie, page 92.

  `I went as
far as I could': Letters, page 694.

  `At twelve o'clock you drove up': Letters, page 686.

  `for luncheon, dinner, suppers, amusements': Letters, page 688.

  `work undisturbed': Letters, page 686.

  `had a great number of callers': statement of Thomas Price, 1895, witness statements, private collection.

  `I would not allow him': statement of Ernest Scarfe, 1895, witness statements, private collection.

  `I remember him because': statement of Thomas Price, 1895, witness statements, private collection.

  `Frank': Letters, page 570.

  `You must tell me': Letters, page 570.

  `I am so glad you like': Letters, page 585.

  `deeply moved': Letters, page 586.

  `I am enjoying this place very much': Lord Alfred Douglas to Lady Queensberry, 10 December 1893, in Croft-Cooke, Bosie, page 89.

  `a pretty, interesting boy': diary of W.S. Blunt, 13 December 1893, Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge.

  `Here comes Cromer!': Robert Hichens, Yesterday (London, 1947), page 60.

  `the boy-snatcher of Clement's Inn': Letters, page 878.

  `the last word in comfort': Douglas, Autobiography, page 73.

  `More fair than any flower is thy face': Douglas, Autobiography, page 73.

  `a piece of perfidy': Lord Alfred Douglas to Hesketh Pearson, 13 November 1944, HRC.

  The Scarlet Marquis

  `A typical Englishman': Day, Oscar Wilde, page 68.

  `hurled out of the official residence': Robert Ross to Frank Harris, 17 May 1914, HRC.

  `the fleshpots of Egypt': Letters, page 704.

  `a romantic encounter': Queensberry, Oscar Wilde and the Black Douglas, page 33.

  `I know that on the sand': Douglas, Sonnets, page 21.

  `I confess I was astounded': Letters, page 695.

  `Finally you actually telegraphed': Letters, page 695.

  `I said that time healed every wound': Letters, page 695.

  `passionate telegrams': Letters, page 695.

  `a threat of suicide': Letters, page 695.

  `When I arrived in Paris': Letters, page 696.

  `flame-coloured': Works, page 280.

  `Love is wiser than Philosophy': Works, page 280.

 

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