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Feasting with Panthers (1967) - Printable Version +- Story-Portal (https://time-tales.af/storys) +-- Forum: EBOOK (https://time-tales.af/storys/forumdisplay.php?fid=27) +--- Forum: EBOOK (https://time-tales.af/storys/forumdisplay.php?fid=28) +--- Thread: Feasting with Panthers (1967) (/showthread.php?tid=2742) |
Feasting with Panthers (1967) - Simon - 12-16-2025 Feasting with Panthers is an illuminating study of certain notorious and brilliant Victorians. The great flowering of decadent art toward the end of the nineteenth century has prompted Rupert Croft-Cooke to examine the lives and the works of the most famous and influential writers of that time - the men who made a cult out of their sexual idiosyncrasies, who created an aesthetic from their perversity, and who managed to initiate a revolution in morality that continues today. Mr. Croft-Cooke deals with the period from 1857, the year of Swinburne's meeting with the Pre-Raphaelites at Oxford, to 1895, the year of Oscar Wilde's trials. The first section of the book is about Swinburne, a great poet but an impotent masochist obsessed with flagellation. The second revolves around John Addington Symonds, a celebrated historian and essayist who applied "Greek ideals" to his affairs with gondoliers and Swiss peasants. The third is concerned with Oscar Wilde - the man who bore the brunt of English society's outrage. Feasting with Panthers also illuminates the private lives of such figures as Whitman, Lewis Carroll, Walter Pater, Edmund Gosse, and a multitude of lesser-known but equally fascinating artists. The author has related the works of these late-Victorian writers to their social background, to public morality, the historical setting, and their sexual proclivities, enabling him to place the worth of their art in a new and more accurate perspective, and to examine the dimension of decadence as it undercut the fabric of manners and morals. Quote: Wilde was at that time behaving with his usual indiscretion at Worthing where he and Bosie Douglas had picked up a newspaper boy named Alphonse Conway and two of his associates named Percy and Stephen. When Bosie left, Wilde wrote to him: “Percy left the day after you did. He spoke much of you. Alphonso is still in favour. He is my only companion, along with Stephen. Alphonso always alludes to you as ‘the Lord’, which however gives you, I think, a Biblical Hebraic dignity that gracious Greek boys should not have. He also says, from time to time, ‘Percy was the Lord’s favourite’, which makes me think of Percy as the infant Samuel—an inaccurate reminiscence, as Percy was Hellenic.” |