De Profundis and Other Writings
This collection contains, too, many examples of that humorous and epigrammatic genius which captured the London theatre and, by suddenly casting light from an unexpected angle, widened the bounds of truth.
Paperback, 256 pages
Published
August 26th 1976
by Penguin Classics
(first published 1897)
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A superb work of prose, this autobiographical essay in epistolary form is also--although Wilde would never call it so--an unconventional moral exhortation and an impressionistic work of Christology. This letter from prison written to Lord Alfred "Bosie" Douglas--Wilde's young lover and the occasion of his downfall--urges the young lord to face up to his own reckless past behavior and to seek the knowledge of self that can only be gained through suffering. "Shallowness is the only sin." Wilde rep...more
"The Soul of Man Under Socialism" is pure genius. Rarely are politics and poetry so beautifully entwined, yet Wilde presents them as inherently so. Two jewels that shone particularly bright in the lattice:
"...the past is what man should not have been. The present is what man ought not to be. The future is what artists are."
"...a community is infinitely more brutalized by the habitual employment of punishment than it is by the occasional occurrence of crime."
"The Decay of Lying" is classic Wild...more
"...the past is what man should not have been. The present is what man ought not to be. The future is what artists are."
"...a community is infinitely more brutalized by the habitual employment of punishment than it is by the occasional occurrence of crime."
"The Decay of Lying" is classic Wild...more
Stating Wilde's brilliance seems sort of redundant, so I will steer clear of that for now.
I consider De Profundis to be his most heartfelt work ever. It's Wilde's 50,000+ word letter to his lover from prison (and, if you didn't know, the major reason why he was convicted of homosexuality was due to said gay lover). It's the most meaningful thing Wilde ever wrote in his life, and it shines through.
This is a MUST READ for any and all Wilde fans.
I consider De Profundis to be his most heartfelt work ever. It's Wilde's 50,000+ word letter to his lover from prison (and, if you didn't know, the major reason why he was convicted of homosexuality was due to said gay lover). It's the most meaningful thing Wilde ever wrote in his life, and it shines through.
This is a MUST READ for any and all Wilde fans.
The edition I read only had De Profundis. It was the 1949 version, which had a nice typeface, but which I since learned is not the most faithful to Wilde's manuscript. Next time I read it, I'll be sure to read a better edition.
De Profundis is a diatribe, elegy, conversion story, but above all, work of moral instruction, hoping to reform Wilde's young associate Lord Alfred Douglas (lover? friend?), also a poet and aesthete. Wilde, however, doesn't like morality, so he encodes his morality in aest...more
De Profundis is a diatribe, elegy, conversion story, but above all, work of moral instruction, hoping to reform Wilde's young associate Lord Alfred Douglas (lover? friend?), also a poet and aesthete. Wilde, however, doesn't like morality, so he encodes his morality in aest...more
this is the letter to a lover that you always mean to write, but don't. it's perfect and amazing, and the next time someone dumps you, rejects you, or just doesn't feel "that way" about you, you should read this and try and find a way to turn your festering inferiority complex into a work of pure genius.
Lunga lettera che Wilde scrisse a un (a quanto ci dicono) avvenente omosessuale dell'epoca che non si fece scrupolo di testimoniare contro di lui nel famoso processo che finì con una condanna di due anni ai lavori forzati nel carcere di Reading, come a dire che si si sia nell'800 o nel 2000, etero o gay, non cambia una grande verità: che più sei stronzo e più ti muoiono dietro.
In una piccola parentesi che vuole essere pseudo-seria aggiungo che nel suo piccolo Wilde potrebbe aver a suo modo impar...more
In una piccola parentesi che vuole essere pseudo-seria aggiungo che nel suo piccolo Wilde potrebbe aver a suo modo impar...more
De profundis
The first part is a real treat for gossipers, the second one, a treat for a sufferer. (The first one listing the trouble Wilde's friend Adolf had put him through, and the second one filled with forgiveness, chagrin, even Christian philosophy). After arrogant, ironic style in The Picture of Dorian Gray, quoted to express cynicism all over the web (facebook particularly), the painful, demure, and even submissive tone in De Profundis came as a huge surprise. Wilde is broken and ready to...more
The first part is a real treat for gossipers, the second one, a treat for a sufferer. (The first one listing the trouble Wilde's friend Adolf had put him through, and the second one filled with forgiveness, chagrin, even Christian philosophy). After arrogant, ironic style in The Picture of Dorian Gray, quoted to express cynicism all over the web (facebook particularly), the painful, demure, and even submissive tone in De Profundis came as a huge surprise. Wilde is broken and ready to...more
OSCAR WILDE: Letters and Essays. (1993). Merlin Holland (ed.). ****.
This collection of Wilde’s letters and essays was published by The Folio Society in 1995 as part of a three-volume set of the works of the author. I’ll keep them separate since I don’t play to read all three volumes at once. Of Wilde’s letters, the most famous is, of course, “De Profundis,” a very long letter written to Lord Alfred Douglas while Wilde was still in prison at Reading. He was not allowed to send this letter, but h...more
This collection of Wilde’s letters and essays was published by The Folio Society in 1995 as part of a three-volume set of the works of the author. I’ll keep them separate since I don’t play to read all three volumes at once. Of Wilde’s letters, the most famous is, of course, “De Profundis,” a very long letter written to Lord Alfred Douglas while Wilde was still in prison at Reading. He was not allowed to send this letter, but h...more
Un po' di anni fa ho letto qualcosa di Wilde: da "Il ritratto di Dorian Gray", , a "The importance of being Earnest", da "Il fantasma di Canterville" ale raccolte di aforismi. Il ricordo che ho: un artista eccentrico e provocatore dalla scrittura ironica e pungente.
Nel "De profundis", lunghissima lettera (mi pare la più lunga mai scritta) indirizzata al suo amico Douglas (Bosie nella lettera), ritrovo uno stile profondamente triste.
Nel "De profundis", lunghissima lettera (mi pare la più lunga mai scritta) indirizzata al suo amico Douglas (Bosie nella lettera), ritrovo uno stile profondamente triste.
Wilde si trova in carcere dove sconta una pena di due anni ai la
...more
A must read if you're a die-hard Wilde fan like me, because it gives insight into Wilde's complete views on art as a whole, and the concept of creation and the imagination. It's a collection that sums up the man's genius, both intellectually and emotionally, and I thought "The Decay of Lying" was exceptionally well crafted and thought provoking with its ideas on "lying" as the basis of pure, untainted artistic creation and the arts transcending the moral values, and colours of society. Art exist...more
This long letter was written by Wilde to his lover Lord Douglas from prison, where he was serving a three year sentence for "obscenity" related to his relationship with Mr. Douglas.
Wilde is a wonderful writer, and his writing style shines thoughout the book.
The first half of the book, which is a personal indictment of Mr. Douglas' behavior, in my opinion, detracts from the book. It is well-written, but it made me absolutely detest Wilde as a person.
The scenario, conveyed in the first half of th...more
Wilde is a wonderful writer, and his writing style shines thoughout the book.
The first half of the book, which is a personal indictment of Mr. Douglas' behavior, in my opinion, detracts from the book. It is well-written, but it made me absolutely detest Wilde as a person.
The scenario, conveyed in the first half of th...more
Oscar Wilde is a very funny fellow. He a bit arrogant - " I have nothing to declare except my genius"
And he is also a wild man, an anachist - "It is through disobedience and rebellion that progress has been made"
And he is highlyquotable - "A man who does not think for himself does not think at all".
I think that the points he made regarding the ownership of private property in the Soul of a Man Under Socialism are more relevant now than what they were when he originally put that shit down. It s...more
And he is also a wild man, an anachist - "It is through disobedience and rebellion that progress has been made"
And he is highlyquotable - "A man who does not think for himself does not think at all".
I think that the points he made regarding the ownership of private property in the Soul of a Man Under Socialism are more relevant now than what they were when he originally put that shit down. It s...more
Catártico, Comienzo impresionante.
". . . Suffering is one very long moment. We cannot divide it by seasons. We can only record its moods, and chronicle their return. With us time itself does not progress. It revolves. It seems to circle round one centre of pain. The paralysing immobility of a life every circumstance of which is regulated after an unchangeable pattern, so that we eat and drink and lie down and pray, or kneel at least for prayer, according to the inflexible laws of an iron formul...more
". . . Suffering is one very long moment. We cannot divide it by seasons. We can only record its moods, and chronicle their return. With us time itself does not progress. It revolves. It seems to circle round one centre of pain. The paralysing immobility of a life every circumstance of which is regulated after an unchangeable pattern, so that we eat and drink and lie down and pray, or kneel at least for prayer, according to the inflexible laws of an iron formul...more
Wilde unplugged! It’s unsettling…
Reading some other of his writings I had found myself searching for the author behind the sanctimonious characters and words while in De Profundis the experience was pretty much reversed. Wilde is professing humility all the while his well-known lyrical insightfulness betrayed otherwise.
What Wilde is essentially doing in De Profundis is to argue for himself, that he has gained the best of both the society who rejected him and the gaol that was now he life him an...more
Reading some other of his writings I had found myself searching for the author behind the sanctimonious characters and words while in De Profundis the experience was pretty much reversed. Wilde is professing humility all the while his well-known lyrical insightfulness betrayed otherwise.
What Wilde is essentially doing in De Profundis is to argue for himself, that he has gained the best of both the society who rejected him and the gaol that was now he life him an...more
Wilde’s 50,000-word epistolary j’accuse to former lover Bosie, written from prison, is also a glorious piece of prose artistry and a fascinating essay on art theory, ethics, and speculative Christian theology. Wilde is in turn unbearably pompous and unbearably sympathetic, preaching with real conviction about his own personal genius one moment and then, with equal conviction, about the necessity of humility. In the final paragraph he admits the inconsistencies.
Wilde must have known that this wo...more
Wilde must have known that this wo...more
It is perhaps a point of tragedy that De Profundis was not the last thing written by Oscar Wilde, but it was, nevertheless, one of the last things published by him. (In this sense, it is the Let It Be of his career, and it works far better as that than, say, Abbey Road, which was actually the Beatles last album, though not chronologically so. I digress:) Hence, the final paragraph of De Profundis can and should be read as Oscar's farewell to words. It is everything one's final statement should b...more
– Lily-toting, champagne-swigging dandy Wilde is one of the most forceful essayists I’ve ever read, and his critical works prove that literary theory can be just as entertaining as fiction. But the crown jewel of his non-fiction pieces is De Profundis — an immense, lacerating letter he wrote in prison to his erstwhile lover Sir Alfred “Bosie” Douglas. Considering the genres of memoir and trauma narrative, I think Wilde does such fascinating things with his famously flamboyant persona: he rages,...more
Mar 12, 2009
Alexandre Piccolo
rated it
3 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
literatura-estrangeira,
literatura-inglesa
Belo livro: longa carta, cheia dos aforismos não raro incômodos e das reflexões que soam como devaneios sem fim, mas que propõe sua lógica e profunda na avaliação geral de emoções várias da vida. Destaque para o eco que a noção de sofrimento propaga pelo texto - não apenas por Wilde redigi-la num difícil momento pessoal, mas por forçar-se a trazer suas leituras e observações tão caras ao conceito.
A imagem final, quando imagina a si próprio saindo da prisão sob a "doce chuva [que:] cai tanto sobr...more
A imagem final, quando imagina a si próprio saindo da prisão sob a "doce chuva [que:] cai tanto sobr...more
probably the greatest words I've ever read in my life. I can't articulate what this book meant to me and everything that it gave me. Quite the ordeal, to say the very least. The way suffering is articulated in this book will stay with me forever. To take such an experience and make it something so strong and influential to ones life is truly amazing. The mind is an incredible tool if used in the right way! My one and only question left is this....did he really listen to his mind, or did this vis...more
I understand that Wilde had a surfeit of free time while sitting in prison after having his entire life destroyed by a thoughtless lad, but who writes an entire break-up book ...and then publishes it with only a token effort to mask the identities of those involved? It's flagrantly self-indulgent.
Not only that, but it seems like the prototype for invasive reality tv and info-tainment. Curse Wilde's mangy hide.
Aside from that, it's beautifully written. I have a hard time believing that Wilde ever...more
Not only that, but it seems like the prototype for invasive reality tv and info-tainment. Curse Wilde's mangy hide.
Aside from that, it's beautifully written. I have a hard time believing that Wilde ever...more
"De Profundis" is probably the greatest break-up letter i've ever read. "The Soul of Man Under Socialism" makes a credible case for Socialism but also levels a scathing critique of Journalism & debates the ethics of Artistic Integrity. His poems are both honest & illuminating. Where Wilde's other work displays his wit & nature as a high aesthe, "De Profundis And Other Writings" shows not only Wilde's range but that he was a man of great substance and talent.
I wish i had of read this...more
I wish i had of read this...more
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Oscar Fingal O'Flahertie Wills Wilde was an Irish playwright, poet and author of numerous short stories and one novel. Known for his biting wit, and a plentitude of aphorisms, he became one of the most successful playwrights of the late Victorian era in London, and one of the greatest celebrities of his day. Several of his plays continue to be widely performed, especially The Importance of Being E...more
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