Travel0 min ago
the love that dare not speak its name
I looked on the internet to try and find what this meant because, embarassingly, I hadn't got a clue.
Anyway, did Oscar Wilde's friend coin it, or just pinch it from somewhere else because I had assumed it was older than that.
Answers
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.It appears to have originated in a poem by Lord Alfred Douglas - Wilde's friend, as you call him. Click http://www.law.umkc.edu/faculty/projects/ftrials/wilde/poemsofdouglas.htm
and scroll down to the last line of the first of the two poems there.
Hi Flash, you're obviously having to do a bit on the divine Oscar. I thought the phrase was current in the Naughty Nineties.
I was told (and I checked and it was true) that people know how Oscar and his circle talked (should you need to add colour to your essay) because people followed him around and took down his conversation verbatim.
Divine meant wonderful or totally cool
quite or too meant very
too too Divine - very good indeed
Divine could be shortened to deevy
or left out altogether - as in "quet too too......"