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The Happy Prince and Other Tales
by Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)
About the author
Oscar
O'Flahertie Fingal Wills Wilde, born in Dublin, Ireland, was the second
son of Sir William and Lady Jane Wilde. Sir William was a renowned
surgeon and Lady Jane was a poet who stood six feet tall and claimed
to be "above respectability." She loved to make a sensation and passed
this passion on to her youngest son. He studied at Trinity College,
Dublin, and at Magdalen College, Oxford, where he distinguished himself
for his scholarship and wit, and also for his eccentricity in dress,
tastes, and manners. Wilde became the center of a group glorifying
beauty for itself alone, and he was satirized with other exponents
of “art for art’s sake” in Punch and in Gilbert and Sullivan’s operetta
Patience. His first published work, Poems (1881), was well received.
The next year he lectured to great acclaim in the United States, where
his drama Vera (1883) was produced. In 1884 he married Constance
Lloyd, and they had two sons, Cyril and Vyvyan.
Later he began writing for and editing periodicals, but his active literary career
began with the publication of Lord Arthur Savile’s Crime and Other Stories (1891)
and two collections of children's tales, The Happy Prince (1888) and The
House of Pomegranates (1892). In 1891 his novel Picture of Dorian Gray appeared.
A tale of horror, it depicts the corruption of a beautiful young man pursuing
an ideal of sensual indulgence and moral indifference; although he himself remains
young and handsome, his portrait becomes ugly, reflecting his degeneration. Wilde’s
stories and essays were well received, but his creative genius found its highest
expression in his plays — Lady Windermere’s Fan (1892), A Woman of
No Importance (1893), An Ideal Husband (1895), and his masterpiece, The
Importance of Being Earnest (1895), which were all extremely clever and filled
with pithy epigrams and paradoxes. Wilde explained away their lack of depth by
saying that he put his genius into his life and only his talent into his books.
He also wrote two historical tragedies, The Duchess of Padua (1892) and Salomé (1893).
In 1891, Wilde had become intimate with Lord Alfred Douglas, and the marquess
of Queensberry, Douglas’s father, accused Wilde of homosexual practices. Foolishly,
Wilde brought action for libel against the marquess and was himself charged with
homosexual offenses under the Criminal Law Amendment, found guilty, and sentenced
to prison for two years. His experiences in jail inspired his most famous poem, The
Ballad of Reading Gaol (1898), and the apology published by his literary
executor as De Profundis (1905). Released in 1897, he lived in France
until his death, plagued by ill health and bankruptcy.
You can read individual chapters here:
or download the whole book to read off-line:
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