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

CHAPTER XXI
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The people passing on the Boulevards, the play of the sunshine in the trees; the noise, the quick movement of the cabs, the costumes of the _cochers_ and _sergents-de-ville_; workers and beggars, pimps and prostitutes--all please me to the soul, charm me, and if you would only let me talk instead of bothering me to write I should be quite happy.

Why should I write any more?
I have done enough for fame.
"I will tell you a story, Frank," he broke off, and he told me a slight thing about Judas.

The little tale was told delightfully, with eloquent inflections of voice and still more eloquent pauses....
"The end of all this is," I said before going back to London, "that you will not write ?" "No, no, Frank," he said, "that I cannot write under these conditions.
If I had money enough; if I could shake off Paris, and forget those awful rooms of mine and get to the Riviera for the winter and live in some seaside village of the Latins with the blue sea at my feet, and the blue sky above, and God's sunlight about me and no care for money, then I would write as naturally as a bird sings, because I should be happy and could not help it....
"You write stories taken from the fight of life; you are careless of surroundings, I am a poet and can only sing in the sunshine when I am happy." "All right," I said, snatching at the half-promise.

"It is just possible that I may get hold of some money during the next few months, and, if I do, you shall go and winter in the South, and live as you please without care of money.

If you can only sing when the cage is beautiful and sunlight floods it, I know the very place for you." With this sort of vague understanding we parted for some months.
FOOTNOTES: [25] _Cfr._ Appendix.
[26] See Appendix..


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