- Sep 2024
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web.archive.org web.archive.org
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Quotations and Literary Allusions spoken by Willy Wonka in the 1971 film, Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory<br /> by Thomas M. Brodhead<br /> https://bmt-systems.com/score/wonka.htm
Archived copy: https://web.archive.org/web/20200111135336/https://bmt-systems.com/score/wonka.htm
Tags
- Horace Walpole
- John Keats
- Ogden Nash
- Samuel Taylor Coleridge
- Willy Wonka
- John Masefield
- Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory (1971)
- allusions
- Roald Dahl
- warts
- William Allingham
- quotes
- Neil Armstrong
- Prinzmetal's Angina
- Oscar Wilde
- Arthur O'Shaughnessy
- ej
- Endymion
- Havelock Ellis
- Wilhelm Friedrich Riese
- Horace
- Friedrich von Flotow
- poetry
- Hilaire Belloc
- Lewis Carroll
- Wonkatania
- 2 Samuel 1:23
- Thomas Edison
- Romeo and Juliet
- 1971
Annotators
URL
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- Jun 2022
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en.wikipedia.org en.wikipedia.org
- Dec 2021
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learn-us-east-1-prod-fleet01-xythos.content.blackboardcdn.com learn-us-east-1-prod-fleet01-xythos.content.blackboardcdn.com
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Oscar Wilde declared he was an advocateof socialism because he didn’t like having to look at poor people orlisten to their stories
Original reference for this? actual quote?
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- May 2020
- Mar 2020
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www.thenation.com www.thenation.com
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Oscar Wilde
This is the original manuscript of Oscar Wilde’s De Profundis; a long, harrowing letter written to his lover Lord Alfred Douglas, whose dysfunctional relationship with his father Wilde blamed for his trial and imprisonment from 1895–97. What does the title mean?
‘De Profundis’ is Latin for ‘from the depths’; it comes from the first line of Psalm 130 of the penitential Psalms: ‘Out of the depths have I cried unto thee, O Lord’. The writer E. V. Lucas (1868–1938) claimed to have suggested the title; Wilde had suggested ‘Epistola: In Carcere et Vinculis’, meaning ‘Letter: In Prison and in Chains’.
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