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Oscar Wilde, His Life and Confessions — Volume 1 by Frank Harris
page 40 of 245 (16%)

There had been great curiosity about him; he was said to be the best talker
of the day, and one of the ripest scholars. There were those in the University
who predicted an astonishing future for him, and indeed all possibilities seemed
within his reach. "His verses were listened to," said "The Oxford and Cambridge
Undergraduates' Journal", "with rapt attention." It was just the sort of thing,
half poetry, half rhythmic rhetoric, which was sure to reach the hearts and
minds of youth. His voice, too, was of beautiful tenor quality, and exquisitely
used. When he sat down people crowded to praise him and even men of great
distinction in life flattered him with extravagant compliments. Strange to say
he used always to declare that his appearance about the same time as Prince
Rupert, at a fancy dress ball, given by Mrs. George Morrell, at Headington Hill
Hall, afforded him a far more gratifying proof of the exceptional position he
had won.

"Everyone came round me, Frank, and made me talk. I hardly danced at all.
I went as Prince Rupert, and I talked as he charged but with more success, for
I turned all my foes into friends. I had the divinest evening; Oxford meant
so much to me. . . . .

"I wish I could tell you all Oxford did for me.

"I was the happiest man in the world when I entered Magdalen for the
first time. Oxford--the mere word to me is full of an inexpressible, an
incommunicable charm. Oxford--the home of lost causes and impossible ideals;
Matthew Arnold's Oxford--with its dreaming spires and grey colleges, set in
velvet lawns and hidden away among the trees, and about it the beautiful fields,
all starred with cowslips and fritillaries where the quiet river winds its way
to London and the sea. . . . . The change, Frank, to me was astounding; Trinity
was as barbarian as school, with coarseness superadded. If it had not been for
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