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On February 8th, 1882, Wilde lectured in Buffalo, NY. It was his twelfth lecture of the tour overall, but his seventh in nine days and he was beginning to weary of the travel.
"But I’m dreadfully tired...it isn’t the lecturing. I delight in giving my lectures when I find there is interest in them, but it’s the long distances. The traveling has nearly used me up. I haven’t been used to it you know. At home I’d get up in the morning, have breakfast, do some writing, and then maybe start off for Egypt or some other distant ? (this word could be port, part or past), but take my time about it all." [1]
Fortunately for Wilde the Buffalo lecture was a rare matinee, and there was time for him to take a much needed break with a visit to Niagara Falls. So he "courteously"declined social invitations for the evening, and boarded the 6:10 PM train over the Central Railroad to Niagara Falls, some twenty miles to the north of Buffalo.
Niagara Falls
Today there are twin cities of Niagara Falls.
One is in the state of New York, but this one had not yet been incorporated at the time of Wilde's visit [2].
The other is in Ontario on the Canadian side [3]. This is where Wilde headed and he put up at Prospect House [4] pictured opposite in 1880.
Still Disappointed
Since Wilde's arrival in New York for his tour of America, much had been made in the press of his remark that he was disappointed in the Atlantic Ocean. Now at Niagara Falls, Wilde was confronted by another majestic embodiment of the natural world, and was again moved to apparent meiosis.
"When I first saw Niagara falls I was disappointed in the outline. The design, it seemed to me, was wanting in grandeur and variety of line, but the colors were beautiful." [5]
Related: Wilde Sees The Falls
Again, the press seized upon the remark:
Contemporary parody (click on/off)
Wilde later said that there is only one thing worse than being talked about and that is not being talked about. In this vein he continued an avant garde penchant for capitalizing on his own notoriety, presumably favoring fame over obscurity in spite of the ridicule. Opposite are examples of his continued references to the disappointments of Niagara Falls, and in this interview, on a return visit to America in 1883, Wilde remarks on fame and obscurity, and he provides an update on the Atlantic's monotony.
Prospect House, Niagara Falls, ON (1880)
Wilde wrote in the hotel album:
"The roar of these waters is like the roar when the mighty wave of democracy breaks against the shores where kings lie couched at ease."
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Location of Prospect House
overlooking Horseshoe Falls
on the Canadian side.
New York Herald, October 30th, 1882, 5
From the notes in:
Decorative art in America: a lecture, Together With Letters, Reviews and Interviews, Edited With an By Richard Butler Glaenzer, p243. (Brentano's 1906)