[Oscar Wilde, Volume 1 (of 2) by Frank Harris]@TWC D-Link book
Oscar Wilde, Volume 1 (of 2)

CHAPTER IV
17/24

But neither his own talent nor the bold self-assertion learned from Whistler helped him to earn money; the conquest of London seemed further off and more improbable than ever.

Where Whistler had missed the laurel how could he or indeed anyone be sure of winning?
A weaker professor of AEsthetics would have been discouraged by the monetary and other difficulties of his position and would have lost heart at the outset in front of the impenetrable blank wall of English philistinism and contempt.

But Oscar Wilde was conscious of great ability and was driven by an inordinate vanity.

Instead of diminishing his pretensions in the face of opposition he increased them.

He began to go abroad in the evening in knee breeches and silk stockings wearing strange flowers in his coat--green cornflowers and gilded lilies--while talking about Baudelaire, whose name even was unfamiliar, as a world poet, and proclaiming the strange creed that "nothing succeeds like excess." Very soon his name came into everyone's mouth; London talked of him and discussed him at a thousand tea-tables.


<<Back  Index  Next>>

D-Link book Top

TWC mobile books