|
|
|
|
oscar wilde
Oscar Wilde
was born in Dublin to unconventional parents. His mother, Lady Jane Francesca
Wilde (1820-96), was a poet and journalist. Her pen name was Sperenza
and she warded off creditors by reciting Aeschylus. His father was Sir
William Wilde, an Irish antiquarian, gifted writer, and specialist in
diseases of the eye and ear.
Wilde studied at Portora
Royal School, Enniskillen, County Fermanagh (1864-71), Trinity College,
Dublin (1871-74) and Magdalen College, Oxford (1874-78), where he was
taught by Walter Patewr and John Ruskin. In Oxford, Wilde shocked the
pious dons with his irreverent attitude towards religion and was jeered
at his eccentric clothes. He collected blue china and peacock's feathers,
and later his velvet knee-breeches drew much attention.
In 1878 Wilde received his
B.A. and in the same year he moved to London. His lifestyle and humorous
wit made him soon spokesman for Aestheticism, the late 19th century movement
in England that advocated art for art's sake. He worked as art reviewer
(1881), lectured in the United States and Canada (1882), and lived in
Paris (1883). Between the years 1883 and 1884 he lectured in Britain.
From the mid 1880s, he was regular contributor for the Pall Mall Gazette
and Dramatic View. In 1884 Wilde married Constance Lloyd who died in 1898.
To support his family, Wilde edited Woman's World magazine in 1887-89.
In 1888 he published The Happy Prince and Other Tales, fairy-stories
written for his two sons. The Picture of Dorian Gray followed
in 1890 and next year he brought out more fairy tales. His marriage ended
in 1893. Wilde had met Lord Alfred Douglas ('Bosie') a few years earlier,
an athlete and a poet, who became both the love of the author's life and
his downfall.
Wilde made his reputation
in the theatre world between the years 1892 and 1895 with a series of
highly popular plays. Lady Wintermere's Fan (1892) dealt with
a blackmailing divorcée driven to self-sacrifice by maternal love.
In A Woman of No Importance (1893) an illegitimate son is torn
between his father and mother. An Ideal Husband (1895) dealt
with blackmail, political corruption and public and private honour. The
Importance of Being Earnest (1895) was about two fashionable young
gentlemen and their eventually successful courtship.
Before his theatrical success
Wilde produced several essays, many of these anonymously. His two major
literary-theoretical works were the dialogues The Decay of Lying
(1889) and The Critic as Artist (1890). In the latter Wilde lets
his character state, that criticism is the superior part of creation,
and that the critic must not be fair, rational, and sincere, but possessed
of 'a temperament exquisitely susceptible to beauty'. In a more traditional
essay The Soul of a Man Under Socialism (1891) Wilde takes an
optimistic view of the road to socialist future. He rejects the Christian
ideal of self-sacrifice in favour of joy.
Although married and the
father of two children, Wilde's personal life was open to rumours. His
years of triumph ended dramatically, when his intimate association with
Alfred Douglas led to his trial on charges of homosexuality (then illegal
in Britain). He was sentenced to two years hard labour for the crime of
sodomy. During his first trial Wilde defended himself, that "the
'Love that dare not speak its name' in this century is such a great affection
of an elder for a younger man as there was between David and Jonathan,
such as Plato made the very basis of his philosophy, and such as you find
in the sonnets of Michelangelo and Shakespeare... There is nothing unnatural
about it." Mr. Justice Wills, stated when pronouncing the sentence
that "people who can do these things must be dead to all senses of
shame, and one cannot hope to produce any effect upon them."
Wilde was first in Wandsworth
prison, London, and then Reading Gaol. When he was at last allowed pen
and paper after more than 19 months of deprivation, Wilde had became inclined
to take opposite views on the potential of humankind toward perfection.
During this time he wrote De Profundis (1905), a dramatic monologue
and autobiography, which was addressed to Alfred Douglas.
After his release in 1897
Wilde lived under the name Sebastian Melmoth in Berneval, near Dieppe,
then in Paris. He wrote The Ballad of Reading Gaol, revealing
his concern for inhumane prison conditions. It is said, that on his death
bed Wilde became a Roman Catholic. He died of cerebral meningitis on November
30, 1900, penniless, in a cheap Paris hotel at the age of 46.
|
|