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  1. Sibyl Montgomery. Lord Alfred Bruce Douglas (22 October 1870 – 20 March 1945), also known as Bosie Douglas, was an English poet and journalist, and a lover of Oscar Wilde. At Oxford he edited an undergraduate journal, The Spirit Lamp, that carried a homoerotic subtext, and met Wilde, starting a close but stormy relationship.

  2. Jul 15, 2013 · In June of 1891, Wilde met Lord Alfred “Bosie” Douglas, a 21-year-old Oxford undergraduate and talented poet, who would come to be the author’s own Dorian Gray — his literary muse, his evil genius, his restless lover.

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  4. Feb 12, 2000 · W hen I was a boy, my great uncle, Lord Alfred Douglas - or Bosie, as he was known - was just the photograph of a beautiful young man in a dusty old book of his poetry. I loved, and still love ...

  5. Bosie. A Biography of Lord Alfred Douglas. By DOUGLAS MURRAY. Talk Miramax Books. Read the Review. `The old years that held and fashioned me' (1870-1889) The family into which Lord Alfred Douglas was born was one of the noblest houses in Scotland. They had a colourful history and had once possessed great lands, wealth and influence.

  6. Jul 18, 2000 · But 20-year-old Douglas Murray, who is ending his second year at Magdalen College, Oxford, thinks that Lord Alfred, who died in 1945, has gotten a bad rap. Mr. Murray is the author of ''Bosie,'' a ...

  7. May 17, 2019 · Lord Alfred Douglas (1870-1945), Bosie to all and sundry, is, and will always be, seen as a secondary character in the life of Oscar Wilde, whose rise and fall in Victorian England is inextricably bound up today in the intersection between literary history and queer consciousness. Bosie himself knew that very well and spent much of his life ...

  8. Sir James Douglas (also known as Good Sir James and the Black Douglas; c. 1286 – 1330) was a Scottish knight and feudal lord. He was one of the chief commanders during the Wars of Scottish Independence.

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