Showing Records: 91 - 100 of 467
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Draft titled, "Oscar Wilde, Poet: Crossroads", which begins "Summer diminished Wilde's euphoria. He had an anxious time over his Bray houses...." First and only page of a variation titled, "Delaring His Genius: Marking Time", which begins: "Moving presented problems for which Wilde's enraged exit from Frank Miles's house had not provided...."
Chapter 7
Draft with variations, titled "Delaring His Genius: New Prospects", which begins: "The rage with which Wilde had torn out of Frank Miles's house was succeeded in calm by the problem of finding new lodgings...."
Chapter 8
Draft in two versions, each with variations. Version 1 titled, "Crossroads", which begins: "Wilde departed regretfully, in December 1878, from the refined surroundings and assured friendships he had known at Oxford...." Version 2 titled, "Declaring His Genius: Bunthorne Abroad", which begins: "Moving presented problems for which Wilde's grand exit from Frank Miles's house had not provided...."
Chapter 9
Draft with variations, titled, "Two Kinds of Stage: Wilde Nubile", which begins: Wilde stayed for a time with his mother at 116 Park Street, Grosvenor Square...."
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Draft in four versions. Version one, an early version, is imcomplete. Version 2 and 3 titled, "1884-1886: Adventures in Doubleness", which begins: "The ambiguous nature of Paris as patroness of Wilde's bateau ivre on its wedding trip was reflected in notes he jotted down...." Version 3 titled, "Disciple to Master: New Anatomies", which begins: "At Oxford Wilde had made the problem of becoming or not becoming a Roman Catholic the tense center of much of his verse...."
Chapter 12
Draft in three versions, each with variations. Version 1 titled, "Countering the Renaissance", which begins: "On his return to Londonn Wilde was iin excellent spirits...." Version 2 titled, "1887-1889: Disciple to Master", which begins: "Wilde was thirty-two before he began to discover how he might fully express his personality...." Version 3 titled, "The Age of Dorian: 1889-1891", which begins: "The nineties began in 1889 and ended in 1895...."
Chapter 13
Draft in three versions. Version 1 titled, "Countering the Renaissance", which begins: "On his return to London Wilde was in excellent spirits...." Version 2 titled, "The Age of Dorian: 1889-1991", which begins: "The 'nineties began in 1889 and came to an end in 1895...." Version 3 titled, "Hellenizing Paris: 1891: Mallarme", which begins: "London at his feet, though unwillingly so, Wilde turned his attention to France...."
Chapter 14
Draft in two versions, with variations. Version 1 titled, "Hellenizing Paris", which begins: "London at his fee, though unwillingly so, Wilde turned his attention to France." Version 2 titled, "A Good Woman, and a Not So Good Young Man: 1892", which begins: "Wilde was back in London about 22 December 1891 in time to spend Christmas with his wife and sons...."