Reviews

Transcribed from the 1908 Methuen and Co. edition by David Price, email ccx074@coventry.ac.uk
To Mrs. CAREW
The apparently endless difficulties against which I have contended, and am contending, in the management of Oscar Wilde’s literary and dramatic property have brought me many valued friends; but only one friendship which seemed as endless; one friend’s kindness which seemed to annul the disappointments of eight years. That is why I venture to place your name on this volume with the assurance of the author himself who bequeathed to me his works and something of his indiscretion.
ROBERT ROSS
May 12 th , 1908.
The editor of writings by any author not long deceased is censured sooner or later for his errors of omission or commission. I have decided to err on the side of commission and to include in the uniform edition of Wilde’s works everything that could be identified as genuine. Wilde’s literary reputation has survived so much that I think it proof against any exhumation of articles which he or his admirers would have preferred to forget. As a matter of fact, I believe this volume will prove of unusual interest; some of the reviews are curiously prophetic; some are, of course, biassed by prejudice hostile or friendly; others are conceived in the author’s wittiest and happiest vein; only a few are colourless. And if, according to Lord Beaconsfield, the verdict of a continental nation may be regarded as that of posterity, Wilde is a much greater force in our literature than even friendly contemporaries ever supposed he would become.
It should be remembered, however, that at the time when most of these reviews were written Wilde had published scarcely any of the works by which his name has become famous in Europe, though the protagonist of the æsthetic movement was a well-known figure in Paris and London. Later he was recognised—it would be truer to say he was ignored—as a young man who had never fulfilled the high promise of a distinguished university career although his volume of Poems had reached its fifth edition, an unusual event in those days. He had alienated a great many of his Oxford contemporaries by his extravagant manner of dress and his methods of courting publicity. The great men of the previous generation, Wilde’s intellectual peers, with whom he was in artistic sympathy, looked on him askance. Ruskin was disappointed with his former pupil, and Pater did not hesitate to express disapprobation to private friends; while he accepted incense from a disciple, he distrusted the thurifer.

Oscar Wilde
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REVIEWS


INTRODUCTION


DINNERS AND DISHES


A MODERN EPIC


SHAKESPEARE ON SCENERY


A BEVY OF POETS


PARNASSUS VERSUS PHILOLOGY


HAMLET AT THE LYCEUM


TWO NEW NOVELS


HENRY THE FOURTH AT OXFORD


MODERN GREEK POETRY


OLIVIA AT THE LYCEUM


AS YOU LIKE IT AT COOMBE HOUSE


A HANDBOOK TO MARRIAGE


HALF-HOURS WITH THE WORST AUTHORS


ONE OF MR. CONWAY’S REMAINDERS


TO READ OR NOT TO READ


TWELFTH NIGHT AT OXFORD


THE LETTERS OF A GREAT WOMAN


NEWS FROM PARNASSUS


SOME NOVELS


A LITERARY PILGRIM


BÉRANGER IN ENGLAND


THE POETRY OF THE PEOPLE


THE CENCI


HELENA IN TROAS


PLEASING AND PRATTLING


BALZAC IN ENGLISH


TWO NEW NOVELS


BEN JONSON


THE POETS’ CORNER—I


A RIDE THROUGH MOROCCO


THE CHILDREN OF THE POETS


NEW NOVELS


A POLITICIAN’S POETRY


MR. SYMONDS’ HISTORY OF THE RENAISSANCE


A ‘JOLLY’ ART CRITIC


A SENTIMENTAL JOURNEY THROUGH LITERATURE


COMMON-SENSE IN ART


MINER AND MINOR POETS


A NEW CALENDAR


THE POETS’ CORNER—II


GREAT WRITERS BY LITTLE MEN


A NEW BOOK ON DICKENS


OUR BOOK-SHELF


A CHEAP EDITION OF A GREAT MAN


MR. MORRIS’S ODYSSEY


A BATCH OF NOVELS


SOME NOVELS


THE POETS’ CORNER—III


MR. PATER’S IMAGINARY PORTRAITS


A GOOD HISTORICAL NOVEL


NEW NOVELS


TWO BIOGRAPHIES OF KEATS


A SCOTCHMAN ON SCOTTISH POETRY


LITERARY AND OTHER NOTES—I


MR. MAHAFFY’S NEW BOOK


MR. MORRIS’S COMPLETION OF THE ODYSSEY


SIR CHARLES BOWEN’S VIRGIL


LITERARY AND OTHER NOTES—II


ARISTOTLE AT AFTERNOON TEA


EARLY CHRISTIAN ART IN IRELAND


LITERARY AND OTHER NOTES—III


THE POETS’ CORNER—IV


LITERARY AND OTHER NOTES—IV


THE POETS’ CORNER—V


VENUS OR VICTORY


LITERARY AND OTHER NOTES—V


THE POETS’ CORNER—VI


M. CARO ON GEORGE SAND


THE POETS’ CORNER—VII


A FASCINATING BOOK


THE POETS’ CORNER—VIII


A NOTE ON SOME MODERN POETS


SIR EDWIN ARNOLD’S LAST VOLUME


AUSTRALIAN POETS


SOME LITERARY NOTES—I


POETRY AND PRISON


THE GOSPEL ACCORDING TO WALT WHITMAN


THE NEW PRESIDENT


SOME LITERARY NOTES—II


ONE OF THE BIBLES OF THE WORLD


POETICAL SOCIALISTS


MR. BRANDER MATTHEWS’ ESSAYS


SOME LITERARY NOTES—III


MR. WILLIAM MORRIS’S LAST BOOK


ADAM LINDSAY GORDON


THE POETS’ CORNER—IX


SOME LITERARY NOTES—IV


MR. FROUDE’S BLUE-BOOK


SOME LITERARY NOTES—V


OUIDA’S NEW NOVEL


SOME LITERARY NOTES—VI


A THOUGHT-READER’S NOVEL


THE POETS’ CORNER—X


MR. SWINBURNE’S LAST VOLUME


THREE NEW POETS


A CHINESE SAGE


MR. PATER’S LAST VOLUME


PRIMAVERA


INDEX OF AUTHORS AND BOOKS REVIEWED


Footnotes:

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Год издания

2004-12-02

Темы

Books -- Reviews; Theater -- Reviews

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