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OSCAR See also: WILLS (1856-1900), See also: English author, son of See also: Sir See also: William
See also: Wilde, a famous Irish surgeon, was See also: born in See also: Dublin on the 15th of See also: October 1856; his See also: mother, Jane Francisca Elgee, was well known in Dublin as a graceful writer of verse and See also: prose, under the See also: pen-name of " Speranza." Having distinguished himself in See also: classics at Trinity See also: College, Dublin, Oscar Wilde went to Magdalen College, See also: Oxford, in 1874, and won the See also: Newdigate prize in 1878 with his poem " See also: Ravenna," besides taking a first-class in classical Moderations and in Literae Humaniores
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But his career at Oxford, brilliant intellectually as he showed himself to be, was chiefly signalized by the See also: part he played in what came to be known as the aesthetic See also: movement
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He adopted what to undergraduates appeared the effeminate pose of casting scorn on manly See also: sports, wearing his hair long, decorating his rooms with See also: peacock's feathers, lilies, sunflowers, blue See also: china and other objets d'See also: art, which he declared his See also: desire to " live up to," affecting a lackadaisical manner, and professing intense emotions on the subject of " art for art's See also: sake "—then a new-fangled See also: doctrine which J
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See also: Whistler was bringing into prominence
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Wilde made himself the apostle of this new cult
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At Oxford his behaviour procured him a See also: ducking in the Cherwell, and a wrecking of his rooms, but the cult spread among certain sections of society to such an extent that languishing attitudes, " too-too " costumes and " aestheticism " generally became a recognized pose
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Its affectations were burlesqued in See also: Gilbert and
See also: Sullivan's travesty See also: Patience (1881), which practically killed by ridicule the absurdities to which it had grown
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At the same See also: time it cannot be denied that the " aesthetic " movement, in the aspect fundamentally represented by the school of William See also: Morris and Rossetti, had a permanent influence on English decorative art
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As the leading " aesthete," Oscar Wilde became one of the most prominent personalities of the See also: day; apart from the ridicule he encountered, his affected paradoxes and his witty sayings were quoted on all sides, and in 1882 he went on a lecturing tour in the See also: United States
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In 1884 he married See also: Constance Lloyd
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He had already published in 1881 a selection of his poems, which, however, only attracted admiration in a limited circle
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In 1888 appeared The Happy See also: Prince and Other Tales, illustrated by Walter See also: Crane and Jacomb See also: Hood
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This charming See also: volume of fairy tales was followed up later by a second collection, The See also: House of Pomegranates (1892), acknowledged by the author to be " intended neither for the See also: British See also: child nor the British public." In much of his writings, and in his general attitude, there was to most See also: people an undertone of rather nasty See also: suggestion which created See also: prejudice against him, and his novel, The Picture of Dorian See also: Gray (1891), with all its sparkle and cleverness, impressed them more from this point of view than from its purely
See also: literary brilliance
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Wilde contributed some characteristic articles to the reviews, all coloured by his See also: peculiar attitude towards art and See also: life, and in 1891 re-published three of them as a See also: book called Intentions
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His first real success with the larger public was as a dramatist with Lady See also: Windermere's See also: Fan at the St See also: James's Theatre in 1892, followed by A Woman of No Importance (1893), An Ideal
See also: Husband (1895) and The Importance of Being Earnest (1895)
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The
dramatic and literary ability shown in these plays, all of which were published later in book See also: form, was as undoubted as their diction and ideas were characteristically paradoxical
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In 1893 the licenser of plays refused a licence to Wilde's See also: Salome, but it was produced in French in See also: Paris by Sarah Bernhardt in 1894
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His success as a dramatist had by this time gone some way to disabuse hostile critics of the suspicions as regards his See also: personal character which had been excited by the apparent looseness of morals which since his Oxford days it had always pleased him to affect; but to the consternation of his See also: friends, who had ceased to See also: credit the existence of any real moral obliquity, in 1895 came fatal revelations as the result of his bringing a See also: libel See also: action against the See also: marquis of Queensberry; and at the Old See also: Bailey, in May, Wilde was sentenced to two years' imprisonment with hard labour for offences under the Criminal See also: Law Amendment See also: Act
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It was a melancholy end to what might have been a singularly brilliant career
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Even after leaving prison he was necessarily an outcast from decent circles, and he lived mainly on the Continent, under the name of " See also: Sebastian Melmoth." He died in Paris on the 30th of See also: November 1900
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In 1898 he published his powerful Ballad of See also: Reading See also: Gaol
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His Collected Poems, containing some beautiful verse, had been issued in 1892
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While in prison he wrote an See also: apology for his life which was placed in the hands of his executor and published in 1905
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The See also: manuscripts of A Florentine Tragedy and an essay on See also: Shakespeare's sonnets were stolen from his house in 111895
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In 1904 a five-act tragedy, The Duchess of See also: Padua, written by Wilde about 1883 for Mary See also: Anderson, but not acted by her, was published in a
See also: German See also: translation (Die Herzogin von Padua, translated by Max Meycrfeld) in Berlin
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It is still impossible to take a purely See also: objective view of Oscar Wilde's See also: work,
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The Old Bailey revelations removed all doubt as to the essential unhealthiness of his personal influence; but his literary See also: genius was none the less remarkable, and his plays were perhaps the most See also: original contributions to English dramatic writing during the See also: period
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