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City of Dreams: The 400-Year Epic History of Immigrant New York
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A defining American story of millions of immigrants, hundreds of languages, and one great city ...
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The Passionate Witch
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The Black Friend
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The instant New York Times bestseller! Writing from the perspective of a friend, Frederick Joseph...
She's the One Who Doesn't Say Much (War Stories of the Seven Troublesome Sisters #4)
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Music Player – Unlimited Mp3 Music & Videos Music
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Don't Stop Believin'
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With candor, humor, and warmth, legendary musician, actress, activist, and icon Olivia Newton-John...
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Eilidh G Clark (177 KP) rated The Portrait of Mr W.H. in Books
May 14, 2017
Wilde presents a subjective interpretation of Shakespeare’s sonnets that portrays homoerotic sexual desire as the force for creative inspiration. Foremost, through the character Cyril Graham, the author demonstrates that art is ‘an attempt to realise one’s own personality on some imaginative plane out of reach of the trammelling accidents and limitations of real life’, (Wilde, p.111).
Taking from a hypothesis in the previous century by Edmund Malone and Thomas Tyrwhitt, the character of Cyril forms a theory in which Mr W.H. is a young actor named Willie Hughes, employed by Shakespeare and who is the muse to which the sonnets are devoted. Cyril investigates each poem and pieces together a theory he believes to be true.
On the surface, Cyril’s theory derives from feeling and beauty rather than logic and instruction.
The withholding of facts in Shakespeare’s sonnets energises Cyril. He scours the poems to find a clue that harmonise with his own feelings. Cyril believes that Shakespeare influences his readers by guiding them to Willie Hughes.
Cyril, spurned by the moralistic interpretations of previous critics, becomes enthralled by Shakespeare’s muse.
