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Charmides (Oscar Wilde poem)

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Charmides
Type
Poem
Language
English
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Wikipedia

Charmides was Oscar Wilde's longest and one of his most controversial poems. It was first published in his 1881 collection Poems. The story is original to Wilde, though it takes some hints from Lucian of Samosata and other ancient writers; it tells a tale of transgressive sexual passion in a mythological setting in ancient Greece. Contemporary reviewers almost unanimously condemned it, but modern assessments vary widely. It has been called "an engaging piece of doggerel", a "comic masterpiece whose shock-value is comparable to that of Manet's Olympia and Le Déjeuner sur l'herbe", and "a Decadent poem par excellence" in which "[t]he illogicality of the plot and its deus-ex-machina resolution render the poem purely decorative". It is arguably the work in which Wilde first found his own poetic voice.

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Editions

NameFormatISBNRelease Date
The Collected Poems of Oscar WildePaperback97818532645352000
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Identifiers

Wikidata Work ID
Q19031396

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Last Modified
2023-08-24