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Oscar Wilde in outline cover

Oscar Wilde in outline

Chapter 12: Transcriber’s Notes
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About This Book

The author delivers a concise critical sketch of Oscar Wilde’s life and work, assessing achievements across poetry, fiction, drama and essays. He judges Wilde a brilliant stylist whose poetic reach was limited, highlights a few standout poems, and regards one novel as his primary lasting fiction while placing his dramatic and essayistic gifts more securely. The portrait traces influences such as Walter Pater and Baudelaire, and emphasizes recurring traits—a predisposition the author terms a feminine soul, a spirit of contradiction, exhibitionism and partisanship. It also explores Wilde’s opposition to philistinism, his aesthetic aims, and how personal circumstances affected public reception.

Transcriber’s Notes

  • Obvious typographic and grammatical errors silently corrected.
  • Variations in hyphenation kept as in the original.
  • p. 37: Corrected "a course oath" to "a coarse oath".
  • p. 68: Corrected “It is the father of competition is the waste as well as the destruction of energy.” To “It is the father of competition, and competition is the waste, as well as the destruction, of energy.”