One of the greatest playwrights in the English language, Oscar Wilde was also a legendary wit and a poetic provocateur. He was put on trial and sentenced to two years of hard labor for ‘gross indecency’ by the same English society whose hypocrisy he had put on stage to great effect. His refusal to renounce his homosexuality and love for Lord Alfred Douglas (‘Bosie’) made him first a martyr and later an icon for free love and a myth onto himself. This edition of surviving letters that Wilde wrote to his ‘own dear darling boy’ is a testament to the enduring power and radical force of love. Included are the introductory essays by legendary bookseller A. S. W. Rosenbach and philanthropist William Clark, who first published these letters in 1924, and a little-known letter from Douglas to Wilde.
表中的内容
Contents
Preface by Ulrich Baer
The Letters of Oscar Wilde to Lord Alfred Douglas, 1892-1897
Notes on the Letters
Afterword by Ulrich Baer
A Bibliographical Preface by William Andrews Clark, Jr.
An Essay by A. S. W. Rosenbach
Letters That We Ought to Burn by A. S. W. Rosenbach
Oscar Wilde: Biographical Timeline
关于作者
Ulrich Baer holds degrees from Harvard and Yale, has been awarded Guggenheim, Getty, and Humboldt fellowships, and is University Professor at New York University. He has published books on poetry, photography, and free speech, a novel, short stories, and edited Dickinson, Nietzsche, Rilke, Shakespeare, and Wilde on Love.