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

CHAPTER IV
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He needs no Aristotle to teach him the value of habits; he is soon forced to use them as defences against his pet weaknesses; above all he finds that self-denial has its reward in perfect health; that the thistle pain, too, has its flower.

It is a truism that 'Varsity athletes generally succeed in life, Spartan discipline proving itself incomparably superior to Greek accidence.
Oscar Wilde knew nothing of this discipline.

He had never trained his body to endure or his will to steadfastness.

He was the perfect flower of academic study and leisure.

At Magdalen he had been taught luxurious living, the delight of gratifying expensive tastes; he had been brought up and enervated so to speak in Capua.


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