Hello Michael,
The writer of the Diary has a "post-romantic" attitude in his writing, poetry is the base line in his work...an artistic bent in writing even.
Imho, the answer to whom may have written the Diary, showed this bent in his others writings too.
Yes, I am talking of a known person. You can all work out whom and keep it to yourselves. The writer is dead, I might add.
The clues, for me, are in the clues, and from whence they came.
And it's not a "Springtime for building either"!!!!!!
That's my rare tuppenyha'penny-worth on the Diary said for another couple of years!
Phil
The writer of the Diary has a "post-romantic" attitude in his writing, poetry is the base line in his work...an artistic bent in writing even.
Imho, the answer to whom may have written the Diary, showed this bent in his others writings too.
Yes, I am talking of a known person. You can all work out whom and keep it to yourselves. The writer is dead, I might add.
The clues, for me, are in the clues, and from whence they came.
And it's not a "Springtime for building either"!!!!!!
That's my rare tuppenyha'penny-worth on the Diary said for another couple of years!
Phil

) might as well throw in Oscar! He was not unknown to the West London houses of debauchery, was eccentric, to say the least, thought he was much more clever than anyone else, constantly stole quotations and passed them off as his own wit, etc. Wilde published The Happy Prince and Other Tales in 1888

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