Wilde Salome Quotes

We've searched our database for all the quotes and captions related to Wilde Salome. Here they are! All 17 of them:

The mystery of love is greater than the mystery of death.
Oscar Wilde (Salomé)
It is not wise to find symbols in everything that one sees. It makes life too full of terrors.
Oscar Wilde (Salome: A Tragedy in One Act)
My Salome is a mystic the sister of Salammbô a Saint Thérèse who worships the moon.
Oscar Wilde
Put out the torches! Hide the moon! Hide the stars! Let us hide ourselves in our palace, Herodias. I begin to be afraid.
Oscar Wilde (Salomé)
THE VOICE OF SALOME: Ah! I have kissed thy mouth, Iokanaan, I have kissed thy mouth. There was a bitter taste on thy lips. Was it the taste of blood?... Nay; but perchance it was the taste of love... They say that love hath a bitter taste... But what matter? What matter? I have kissed thy mouth, Iokanaan, I have kissed thy mouth.
Oscar Wilde (Salomé)
I don't like ordinary girls. But a girl who would kill a guy to make him hers and then kiss his still-warm lips... a girl like Oscar Wilde's Salome They drive me crazy. Like Kiyohime turning into a snake to chase her man or the grocery girl Oshichi who set fire to a building just to see hers one more time. I want to be loved like that be obsessed over be hated.
Mizuki Nomura (Book Girl and the Famished Spirit)
THE YOUNG SYRIAN: How beautiful is the Princess Salome to-night! THE PAGE OF HERODIAS: You are always looking at her. You look at her too much. It is dangerous to look at people in such fashion. Something terrible may happen.
Oscar Wilde (Salomé)
You see, if one plays good music, people don't listen, and if one plays bad music people don't talk.
Oscar Wilde (Plays: The Importance of Being Earnest/An Ideal Husband/Lady Windermere's Fan/A Woman of No Importance/Salome)
Am I thy looking-glass that thou callest me knave?
Oscar Wilde (Complete Writings of Oscar Wilde: Salome. the Importance of Being Earnest)
Put out the torches! Hide the moon! Hide the stars! Let us hide ourselves in our palace, Herodias. I begin to be afraid.
Oscar Wilde (Salomé)
From harsh and shrill and clamant, the voices grew blurred and inarticulate. Bad sentences were helped out by worse gestures, and at one table, Scabius could only express himself with his napkin, after the manner of Sir Jolly Jumble in the first part of the Soldier’s Fortune of Otway. Basalissa and Lysistrata tried to pronounce each other’s names, and became very affectionate in the attempt; and Tala, the tragedian, robed in roomy purple and wearing plume and buskin, rose to his feet and with swaying gestures began to recite one of his favourite parts. He got no further than the first line, but repeated it again and again, with fresh accents and intonations each time, and was only silenced by the approach of the asparagus that was being served by satyrs dressed in white muslin. Clitor and Sodon had a violet struggle over the beautiful Pella, and nearly upset a chandelier. Sophie became very intimate with an empty champagne bottle, swore it had made her enceinte, and ended by having a mock accouchement on the top of the table; and Belamour pretended to be a dog, and pranced from couch to couch on all fours, biting and barking and licking. Mellefont crept about dropping love philtres into glasses. Juventus and Ruella stripped and put on each other’s things, Spelto offered a prize for who ever should come first, and Spelto won it! Tannhäuser, just a little grisé, lay down on the cushions and let Julia do whatever she liked.
Aubrey Beardsley (Salome/ Under the Hill: Oscar Wilde/Aubrey Beardsley (Creation Classics))
To think is never advisable.
Oscar Wilde (The Complete Plays of Oscar Wilde: Salomé, The Importance Of Being Earnest, Salome, A Woman Of No Importance, Lady Windermere's Fan and more)
Think of Oscar Wilde’s wonderful scene in his play Salome, when Herod hears reports that Jesus of Nazareth has been raising the dead. “I do not wish him to do that,” says Herod. “I forbid him to do that. I allow no man to raise the dead. This man must be found and told that
N.T. Wright (Surprised by Hope: Rethinking Heaven, the Resurrection, and the Mission of the Church)
The Times, February 23rd, 1893, in reviewing "Salome", said: "It is an arrangement in blood and ferocity, morbid, bizarre, repulsive and very offensive." Wilde replied (Times, March 2nd), "The opinions of English critics on a French work of mine have, of course, little, if any interest for me.
Stuart Mason (Oscar Wilde: Art and Morality A Defence of "The Picture of Dorian Gray")
He is like a moonbeam, like a shaft of silver.
Oscar Wilde (Salome and Other Plays)
the refusal of a licence – the banning of Salome – was entirely due to Billing’s antics, and not to any serious objection by the Lord Chamberlain;
Philip Hoare (Oscar Wilde's Last Stand: Decadence, Conspiracy, and the Most Outrageous Trial of the Century)
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Salome Wilde