ABSTRACT

The years between 1850 and 1900 were the vintage years of a discreet homosexual culture in England. In this period, educational, personal and foreign influences all contributed to the establishment of a trend expressed in the works of authors such as John Addington Symonds, Walter Pater, and A.E. Housman, and in those of lesser writers, now largely forgotten. This book, first published in 1970, is an anthology of English prose and verse, either homosexual in tone or providing a vehicle for homosexual emotions, and in several examples even overtly and experimentally frank. The book includes an introduction by Brian Reade explaining the network of friendships and associations which underlay this development and tracing some of its origins.

chapter |56 pages

Introduction

chapter |4 pages

Contents of Anthology

chapter 1|1 pages

Schooldays

chapter 2|5 pages

In Memoriam

chapter 3|1 pages

‘Half a Heart’

chapter 4|1 pages

‘Heraclitus’

chapter 5

‘Preparation’

chapter 6|1 pages

‘Parting’

chapter |1 pages

‘What Cannot Be’

chapter 8|1 pages

‘Hermaphroditus’

chapter 9|2 pages

‘The Beginning of the End’

chapter 10|2 pages

‘A Letter’

chapter 11|1 pages

‘Sonnet’

chapter 12|27 pages

‘Winckelmann’

chapter 13|27 pages

‘Eudiades’

chapter 14|2 pages

‘Ganymede’

chapter 15|8 pages

A Vision of Love Revealed in Sleep

chapter 16|1 pages

‘Son’

chapter 17|1 pages

‘The Peak of Terror’

chapter 18|2 pages

‘Midnight at Baiae’

chapter 19|1 pages

‘Wasted Days’

chapter 20|7 pages

‘The Legend of the Water Lilies’

chapter 21|1 pages

‘The Bugler’s First Communion’

chapter 22|1 pages

‘A Love Song’

chapter 23|1 pages

‘If Any One Return’

chapter 24|1 pages

‘Requiescat’

chapter 25

‘Stella Maris XLV’

chapter 26|1 pages

‘The Flute of Daphnis’

chapter 27

‘A Palaestral Study’

chapter 28|35 pages

‘Terminal Essay’

chapter 29|4 pages

Marius the Epicurean

chapter 30|1 pages

‘Rose Leaves When the Rose is Dead’

chapter 31|1 pages

‘The World Well Lost IV’

chapter 33|1 pages

‘Lovelace’

chapter 34|3 pages

Arthur Hamilton at Cambridge

chapter 35|1 pages

‘Muscovy’

chapter 36

‘Amor Redux’

chapter 37|18 pages

The Deemster

chapter 38|1 pages

‘Jealousy’

chapter 39|2 pages

‘Epithalamion’

chapter 40|1 pages

‘Joy Standeth on the Threshold’

chapter 42|1 pages

‘Put on that Languor’

chapter 43

‘Ballade of Boys Bathing’

chapter 44|1 pages

‘To W.J.M.’

chapter 45|1 pages

‘Sonnet’

chapter 46|16 pages

Teleny

chapter 47|1 pages

‘Comrade, my Comrade’

chapter 48|1 pages

‘Non Delebo Propter Decem’

chapter 49|1 pages

‘Antinous’

chapter 50

‘To Kalon’

chapter 51|37 pages

A Problem in Modern Ethics

chapter 52|16 pages

Tim

chapter 53|1 pages

‘Of Boys’ Names’

chapter 54|1 pages

‘Sonnet IV. Held in Bondage’

chapter 55

‘St William of Norwich’

chapter 56|1 pages

‘The Destroyer of a Soul’

chapter 58|1 pages

‘Daphnis’

chapter 59

‘Heartsease and Orchid’

chapter 60|1 pages

‘By the Aegean’

chapter 61|1 pages

‘To a Sicilian Boy’

chapter 62

‘We Have Forgot’

chapter 63|1 pages

‘Many are Dreams’

chapter 64

‘I Love him Wisely’

chapter 65|1 pages

‘Ah, would that I in Dreamland’

chapter 66

‘You Wonder Why’

chapter 67|4 pages

‘The Age of Athletic Prizemen’

chapter 68|6 pages

‘The New Chivalry’

chapter 69|5 pages

‘Narcissus’

chapter 70|23 pages

Homogenic Love

chapter 71|2 pages

‘August Blue’

chapter 72|1 pages

‘A Summer Hour’

chapter 73|10 pages

‘The Priest and the Acolyte’

chapter 74|2 pages

‘Two Loves’

chapter 75|1 pages

‘In Praise of Shame’

chapter 76|54 pages

The Portrait of Mr. W.H.

chapter 77|1 pages

‘Rondeau’

chapter 78|1 pages

‘Tulip of the Twilight’

chapter 80|1 pages

‘All Souls’ Night’

chapter 81|1 pages

‘Look Not in my Eyes’

chapter 83|1 pages

‘Shot? so Quick, so Clean an Ending?’

chapter 84|1 pages

‘With Whom, then, should I Sleep?’

chapter 85|1 pages

‘Rouge et Noir’

chapter 86|1 pages

‘Dédicace’

chapter 87|1 pages

‘Go into the Highways’

chapter 88|22 pages

Jaspar Tristram

chapter 89|1 pages

‘Bored’