Booth, a beautiful Greek boy, was actually just a willful and unloving child, but it was this characteristic that gave Wilde a strong desire to protect. One is rebellious and naive, the other is brilliant, but unfortunately they are all men, so they are labeled as "perverted" by society.
The pursuit of truth is the poet's inner temperament. Faced with an unfair prosecution, Wilde did not choose to escape. He resolutely stood up in court and uttered some sincere words from his mouth, making the faces of the guards around him turn blue, and let him go. The offensive words of others paled.
In the end, Wilde and Booth, who had been in prison, were still together, but Wilde said it was also a tragedy.
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