The Sphinx (poem)

The title-page of the first edition of The Sphinx, with decorations by Charles Ricketts

The Sphinx is a 174-line poem by Oscar Wilde, written from the point of view of a young man who questions the Sphinx in lurid detail on the history of her sexual adventures, before finally renouncing her attractions and turning to his crucifix. It was written over a period of twenty years, stretching from Wilde's years as an Oxford student up to the poem's publication in an édition de luxe in 1894. The Sphinx drew on a wide range of sources, both ancient and modern, but particularly on various works of the French Decadent movement. Though at first coldly received by critics it is now generally recognized as Wilde's finest Decadent poem,[1] and has been described as "unrivalled: a quintessential piece of fin-de-siècle art".[2]

  1. ^ Wilde 1998, pp. xiii–xiv.
  2. ^ Atkinson 2003, p. 53.

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