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Here he was influenced, among his teacher, by John Ruskin and Walter Pater: the first attracted Wilde for his socialist ideas; the second taught him a new sense of art without moral responsibility.
While at Oxford he made some trips with Professor Mahaffy, that taught him to love Hellenism.
So, having took the laureateship in Oxford, and being w

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Among the important influence in his childhood was that of Irish nationalist politics, especially the tragedy of Parnell, the Protestant leader of the Irish Home Rule. After Parnell’s death, in 1891, Joyce’s father, detached from Irish extremism, and took little interest in Irish nazionalist movement. Joyce, deafeated and disappointed, detached from

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"Pipe a song about a Lamb!"
So I piped with merry chear.
"Piper, pipe that song again"
So I piped, he wept to hear.

"Drop thy pipe, thy happy pipe;
Sing thy songs of happy chear-
So I sung the same again,
While he wept with joy to hear.

"Piper, sit thee down and write
In a book, that all may read."

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Introduction
Hear the voice of the Bard!
Who Present, Past, & Future sees
Whose ears have heard,
The Holy Word,
That walk'd among the ancient trees.
Calling the lapsed Soul
And weeping in the evening dew:
That might controll,
The starry pole;
And fallen fallen light renew!
O Earth O Earth return!
Arise fro

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While we can recognise the complimentary nature of these words, it is vital that they be recognised also for their underlying patronising tone, which is barely hidden at all in this context. There is possibly no more underhanded a way to devalue the worth of something than to attack it with patronising compliments which underrate its worth, and to descr

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He left the sea in 1894 because of illness ù, and devoted himself to writing.
He married Jessie George in 1896 by whom he had two sons. He died in 1924.

The principal features and themes of his works:

-A search for the real truth of man’s existence: about it he said that every man communicate his inner nature only after the impa

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He also had a lifelong fear of mental illness, for several men in his family had a mild form of epilepsy, which was then thought a shameful disease. His father and brother Arthur made their cases worse by excessive drinking. His brother Edward had to be confined in a mental institution after 1833, and he himself spent a few weeks under doctors' care in

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"Our Society at Cranford," now the first two chapters of Cranford, appeared in Dickens' Household Words on 13 December 1851 and was itself a fictionalized version of an earlier essay "The Last Generation in England." Dickens so liked the original episode that he pressed G. for more; at irregular intervals between January 1852 and May 1853 eight more epi