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- Published: 30 July 2012
- ISBN: 9780141920764
- Imprint: Penguin eBooks
- Format: EBook
- Pages: 304
Categories:
De Profundis And Other Prison Writings
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A new selection of Wilde's prison letters and poetry, edited and introduced by Colm Tóibín
At the start of 1895, Oscar Wilde was the toast of London: a member of the social and intellectual elite, he was widely feted for his most recent stage success, An Ideal Husband. But by May of the same year, Wilde was in prison, bankrupt and with his reputation in ruins. 'De Profundis' is the astonishing letter he wrote to his lover, Lord Alfred Douglas, from prison; Colm Tóibín describes it as Wilde's 'greatest piece of prose-writing'. Also included in this volume is 'The Ballad of Reading Gaol', as well as other letters revealing to the wider world what prison really did to its inmates.
- Published: 30 July 2012
- ISBN: 9780141920764
- Imprint: Penguin eBooks
- Format: EBook
- Pages: 304
Categories:
Other books in the series
A Dead Man's Memoir (A Theatrical Novel)
Mikhail Bulgakov
A Dog's Heart
Mikhail Bulgakov
The Man Who Was Thursday
G. K. Chesterton
The Black Tulip
Alexandre Dumas
The Lady of the Camellias
Alexandre Dumas fils
Faust, Part I
Goethe
Faust, Part II
Goethe
Selected Poetry
Goethe Johann Wolfgang Von
The Complete Odes and Epodes
Horace
The Aeneid
Virgil
Species of Spaces and Other Pieces
Georges Perec
The Age of Alexander
Plutarch
Fall Of The Roman Republic
Plutarch
The Makers of Rome
Plutarch
On Sparta
Plutarch
The Rise And Fall of Athens
Plutarch
The Rise of Rome
Plutarch
Rome in Crisis
Plutarch
Man and Superman
George Bernard Shaw
Saint Joan
George Bernard Shaw
Botchan
Natsume Soseki
Kusamakura
Natsume Soseki
Military Dispatches
The Duke Of Wellington
Journey to the Centre of the Earth
Jules Verne
Treatise On Toleration
Voltaire
About the author
Oscar Wilde was born in Dublin on 16 October 1854. He studied at Trinity College, Dublin and Magdalen College, Oxford. He then lived in London and married Constance Lloyd in 1884. Wilde was a leader of the Aesthetic Movement. He became famous because of the immense success of his plays such as Lady Windemere's Fan and The Importance of Being Earnest. His only novel, The Picture of Dorian Gray, was first published in Lippincott's Monthly Magazine in 1890 but was revised in 1891 after moralistic negative reviews.
After a public scandal involving Wilde's relationship with Lord Alfred Douglas, he was sentenced to two years' hard labour in Reading Gaol for 'gross indecency'. His poem The Ballad of Reading Gaol was published anonymously in 1898. Wilde never lived in England again and died at the age of forty-six in Paris on 30 November 1900. He is buried in Père Lachaise cemetery where admirers often leave the lipstick marks of kisses on his tomb.