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15 answers

Wilde guess (get it) I think that sounds like good old Oscar.
Jaysus I'm a funny little bastard.

2007-07-04 00:09:55 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 4

Oscar Wilde

2007-07-04 11:42:40 · answer #2 · answered by Amanda b 3 · 0 0

Oscar Wilde

2007-07-04 09:16:14 · answer #3 · answered by bucsandducks 6 · 0 0

Oscar Wilde

2007-07-04 07:58:12 · answer #4 · answered by gormenghast10014 7 · 0 0

Oscar Wilde
zc

2007-07-04 14:53:32 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Oscar Wilde works for radio trivia

2007-07-04 11:31:11 · answer #6 · answered by Char 6 · 0 0

Oscar Wilde is the correct answer for the radio trivia.
t

2007-07-04 12:56:42 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Oscar Wilde worked for radio trivia.
r

2007-07-04 08:30:00 · answer #8 · answered by Kelley 6 · 4 0

Oscar Wilde is the correct answer for the radio trivia.
RCR

2007-07-04 12:37:58 · answer #9 · answered by Rogers R 4 · 1 0

I don't know about Geo C's reply to your question. Every site I found says Oscar Wilde.

2007-07-04 08:35:51 · answer #10 · answered by ghouly05 7 · 2 1

OSCAR WILDE is the us99 trivia answer.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/oscar_wilde...

Prison was unkind to Wilde's health and after he was released on May 19, 1897 he spent his last three years penniless, in self-imposed exile from society and artistic circles. He went under the assumed name of Sebastian Melmoth, after the famously "penetrated" Saint Sebastian and the devilish central character of Wilde's great-uncle Charles Robert Maturin's gothic novel Melmoth the Wanderer.

Nevertheless, Wilde lost no time in returning to his previous pleasures. According to Douglas, Ross "dragged [him] back to homosexual practices" during the summer of 1897, which they spent together in Berneval. After his release, he also wrote the famous poem The Ballad of Reading Gaol. Wilde spent his last years in the Hôtel d'Alsace, now known as L'Hôtel, in Paris, where he was notorious and uninhibited about enjoying the pleasures he had been denied in England. Again according to Douglas, "he was hand in glove with all the little boys on the Boulevard. He never attempted to conceal it." In a letter to Ross, Wilde laments, "Today I bade good-bye, with tears and one kiss, to the beautiful Greek boy. . . he is the nicest boy you ever introduced to me."[12] Just a month before his death he is quoted as saying, "My wallpaper and I are fighting a duel to the death. One or other of us has got to go."

2007-07-04 09:41:10 · answer #11 · answered by zilly 5 · 1 3

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