The Nation: Oscar Wilde
The Nation: Oscar Wilde
The Nation: Oscar Wilde
O.W. was born in Dublin on 16th October 1854. His father, sir William Wilde, was an
important surgeon and his mother was a writer who, under the pen-name of
“Speranza”, wrote for the radical newspaper The Nation. He had a happy childhood,
but was somewhat influenced by “Speranza”: she used to dress her son up as a little
girl. He attended Trinity College in Dublin and Oxford , his favourite subject was
Greek, loved the classics in general and took a first-class in Literae Humaniores.
In Oxford he spent four happy years, he gained a reputation for flamboyant
behaviour ( he used to wear extravagant clothes, to have long hair, to decorate his
rooms with sunflowers, lilies, collected peacock’s feathers. He was a gifted speaker
and became very popular with the intellectual circle of Oxford. At Oxford he became
Walter Pater’s favourite disciple and attended John Ruskin’s lectures, even if he,
later, rejected Ruskin’s ideas on the function of art in society declaring that art did
not have a moral purpose: it should simply produce beauty or, in other words, “Art for
Art’s sake”. He applied the aesthetic ideals to all areas of his life. In 1879 he settled
in London and soon became the leading personality of the English Decadentism. Here
he led an intense social life; his wit and his brilliant conversation, his extravagant
attitudes, made him the lion of London high society and he became notorious before
proving his worth as a writer. In 1882 Wilde went to the USA on a lecture tour on the
“ aesthetics”. His reply to a New York customs official asking if he had anything to
declare: “Nothing but my genius” gained him immediate popularity. In 1884 he married
Constance Lloyd and within two years they had two boys, Cyril and Vyvyan. The family
settled in Chelsea, London, where Wilde worked as a journalist and editor of a
successful magazine, The Woman’s World. He didn’t like the routine existence and,
being homosexual, he fell in love with Robert Ross before and for Lord Alfred
Douglas later. This last close relationship was fatal to him because Alfred’s father
accused Wilde of homosexual conduct and, after a trial Wilde, was sentenced to two
year imprisonment with hard labour. The prison ruined his spirit and his health and
when he was released he had become poor and unpopular; his wife refused to join him,
he left England and wandered around Europe under the false name of Sebastian
Melmoth. His death in Paris on 30th of November 1900, at the age of 46, put an end
to his squalid and miserable last years. Before dying, Oscar Wilde had become a
Roman Catholic and fervent believer. Two works were the result of his experience in
prison, De profundis and The Ballad of Reading Gaol, a poem which shows sympathy
for the outcasts of society.
Literary career
Oscar Wilde can be considered an eclectic writer because his output covered nearly
all the literary forms, from verse to narrative, from essay to drama. Each of his
works is full of originality, of wit, and brilliant in expression. His first printed book
was a collection entitled Poems (1881). He then began writing short stories, fairy
tales, The Happy Prince and Other Tales, The Canterville Ghost (1891). In the same
year Wilde published The Picture of Dorian Gray, a novel which contains his aesthetic
creed. Dorian believed in eternal beauty and, when he saw the beautiful painting of
himself, he made a wish of eternal beauty and his wish came true: the image on the
picture grew old and ugly while Dorian remained young and beautiful. The Victorian
society considered the novel shocking and immoral. In several ways this novel
reflects Wilde’s own life as Dorian and Wilde had the same tragic end. In 1892 he
wrote in French Salomè, that was represented in Paris after being refused in England.
Success came with the witty and brilliant comedies: A Woman of No Importance
(1893), An Ideal Husband (1895), The Importance of Being Earnest (1895).