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Authors: Oscar Wilde

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And yet today Wilde’s plays have never been more popular with audiences all over the world, and the book you are holding is one of the best-selling titles in the Penguin Classics series.
If Dorian Gray
does have a ‘moral’ we can perhaps find it in its final paragraph: the work of art, which has been subjected to hostile moral readings, shamed obscurity, and finally physical harm, remains intact in all its beauty and wonder.

NOTES

1
Wilde’s
Poems
were published at his own expense by David Bogue; these he reissued with a few corrections the following year. They were not a critical success, being considered pale imitations or wanton plagiarisms of Keats, Tennyson, Rossetti, Arnold and Swinburne. As
Punch
put it, ‘The Poet is Wilde,/But the poetry’s tame’. Wilde’s first play,
Vera; or, The Nihilists
, was produced by Marie Prescott, who also played the title role, in August 1883 at the Union Square Theater in New York. It played there for only eight days, but later toured.

2
Similarly, in an editorial note in response to Wilde’s defence of his novel in that paper, the
St James’s Gazette
for 27 June 1890 asserted that this book ‘constantly hints, and not obscurely, at disgusting sins and abominable crimes’; reproduced in Stuart Mason (Christopher Millard),
Oscar Wilde, Art and Morality: A record of the discussion which followed the publication of ‘Dorian Gray’
(London, 1907; revised 1912), 46. All subsequent references to contemporary reviews are taken from this source.

3
For material from the trials, see Hyde,
The Trials of Oscar Wilde
(1948). Wilde addresses the subject of art and morality in response to the critics of
Dorian Gray
in his ‘Preface to Dorian Gray’ (published in the
Fortnightly Review
of March 1891 and reproduced in this edition), in ‘The Critic as Artist’ and in ‘The Soul of Man Under Socialism’, both published in 1891.

4
See Richard Ellmann’s excellent biography,
Oscar Wilde
(1987), 304. Although Wilde might have been having fun at his editor’s expense here.

5
Hyde,
Trials
, 38. The fact that Wilde assents to the designation ‘English gentleman’ here is significant; Wilde the Irishman and wordsmith clearly had his fingers crossed behind his back.

6
Ellmann, 261.

7
Wilde’s conflation of ‘culture and corruption’, and the association between art and crime, was very much in line with the views of a number of contemporary thinkers and could even be considered ‘commonsensical’ at the time. For a start, a broad section of the middle classes would not be surprised to see the aristocracy and the so-called ‘criminal classes’, the idle rich and the underclass, put on a par. Arnold White’s comments on ‘The Sterilisation of the Unfit’ (1886) provide a typical, albeit extreme, articulation of this understanding, describing the two worlds which Dorian inhabits: ‘As luxury and success corrupt the West End, the East is corrupted by want and failure…. Comfort-worship in the West leads to extravagant prudence. Comfort-worship in the
East leads to despair and its consequences’ (from
The Problems of a Great City)
. White speaks on behalf of the ‘trustworthy, energetic element of the population – those who long to rise and do not choose to sink’, a class almost wholly unrepresented in Wilde’s novel. Furthermore, the artist was also considered by some influential writers to have many points of resemblance with both criminals and the insane. In the year that
Dorian Gray
was first published, Henry Havelock Ellis’s ‘scientific’ study,
The Criminal
(1890), asserted that ‘The vanity of criminals is at once an intellectual and emotional fact…. They share this character with a large proportion of artists and literary men. [Extreme vanity] marks the abnormal man, the man of unbalanced mental organization, artist or criminal’ (139). That such views were not confined to ‘specialists’ is suggested by the fact that the
Scots Observer
pointed out that if Wilde’s ‘assumption of vanity’ (displayed in
Dorian Gray
and in his defence of it) was sincere it would ‘betoken either the madman or the criminal’ (Mason, 134).

8
Algernon explains to Jack (or Ernest when he is in town) the principles of Bunburying in Act I of
The Importance of Being Earnest:

ALGERNON:
You have invented a very useful young brother called Ernest, in order that you may be able to come up to town as often as you like. I have invented an invaluable permanent invalid called Bunbury, in order that I may be able to go down into the country whenever I choose. Bunbury is perfectly invaluable.
… Nothing will induce me to part with Bunbury, and if you ever get married, which seems to me extremely problematic, you will be very glad to know Bunbury. A man who marries without knowing Bunbury has a very tedious time of it.

9
Vivian’s complaint in ‘The Decay of Lying’ that ‘the transformation of Dr Jekyll reads dangerously like something out of the
Lancet
[a medical paper]’ is testimony to its imaginative appeal for Wilde.

10
Stevenson,
The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde and Other Tales of Terror
, edited by Robert Mighall (Penguin: Harmondsworth, 2002), 60.

11
The statute which convicted Wilde was an amendment to an Act ‘to make further provision for the Protection of Women and Girls, the suppression of brothels and other purposes’. The principal aim of the Act was to protect young girls from the exploitation of brothel-keepers who ran a ‘trade’ in virgins, when it raised the age of consent from thirteen to sixteen years. Section 11, however, dealt with intimate acts between male persons, a more precise legal proscription of homosexual activities than had hitherto been enacted. The Act outlawed any and all ‘acts of gross indecency with another male person’, whether in public or private, and carried a maximum sentence of two years with hard labour, Wilde’s own sentence. On Wilde’s experience of blackmail, see Ellmann, 362, 366–7.

12
When a reviewer from the
St James’s Gazette
, who had hinted at criminal proceedings against Wilde, challenged the author about the sincerity of what he was describing, Wilde claimed that he meant ‘every word of what I have said, and everything at which I have hinted in
Dorian Gray
’. The reviewer replied, ‘Then… all I can say is that if you do mean them you are likely to find yourself at Bow Street one of these days’ (Ellmann, 303).

13
When asked what the flower meant, Wilde answered, ‘Nothing whatever, but that is just what nobody will guess.’ There are some doubts about the authenticity of this anecdote, however. Wilde claimed to have ‘invented that magnificent flower’, chosen for its artificiality, its improvement on nature (Ellmann, 345). A novel written by Robert Hitchens, an acquaintance of Wilde and also a homosexual, which transparently depicts Wilde’s relationship with Douglas, was entitled
The Green Carnation
. It was published in 1894, but withdrawn at the time of Wilde’s trials a year later.

14
In 1883 the homosexual apologist John Addington Symonds privately printed
A Problem in Greek Ethics
, where he argued that ‘the Dorians gave the earliest and the most marked encouragement to Greek love. Nowhere else, indeed, except among the Dorians… do we meet with pederastia developed as an institution.’ For him, ‘Greek love took its origins in Doris’ (reproduced in Ellis and Symonds,
Sexual Inversion
, 1897). See Espey, ‘Resources for Wilde Studies at the Clark Library’, in
Oscar Wilde, Two Approaches: Papers Read at a Clark Library Seminar
, ed. Ellmann and Espey (1977).

15
As Wilde claimed: ‘Basil Hallward is what I think I am: Lord Henry what the world thinks of me: Dorian what I would like to be – in other ages, perhaps.’ (Letter to Ralph Payne, 12 February 1894.)

16
On these revisions, see Lawler, ‘Oscar Wilde’s First Manuscript of
The Picture of Dorian Gray’
(1972), 125–35; and Lawler,
An Inquiry into Oscar Wilde’s Revisions of ‘‘The Picture of Dorian Gray’’
(1988).

17
As Wilde claimed, ‘Each man sees his own sin in Dorian Gray. What Dorian Gray’s sins are no one knows. He who finds themhas brought them’ (Mason, 81).

18
Eyries,
Tales of the Dead: The Ghost Stories of the Villa Diodati
, translated by Terry Hale (1992). ‘Family Portraits’ was read by Byron, the Shelleys and John Polidori during their famous residence at the Villa Diodati in Switzerland, which resulted in Mary Shelley’s
Frankenstein
and Polidori’s
The Vampire
. On the Villa Diodati and what it produced, see Frayling,
Nightmare: The Birth of Horror
(1996) and
Vampyres: Lord Byron to Count Dracula
(1992).

19
Perhaps the most famous ‘revelatory’ portrait from nineteenth-century fiction is that described by Nathaniel Hawthorne in
The House of the Seven Gables
(1851), where the portrait of the original Pyncheon reveals a moral and physical
resemblance between its subject and his descendant Judge Jaffrey, allowing the narrative to reflect on hereditary transmission and to warn against repeating the past. A more recent model for Wilde was Mary Elizabeth Braddon’s
Lady Audley’s Secret
(1862), where a hidden portrait allows George Talboys to discover the truth about the character of his wife who had faked her death and re-invented herself as the eponymous Lady of the title. Revelatory portraits also appear in Robert Louis Stevenson’s ‘Ollala’ (1885), Thomas Hardy’s
Tess of the D’Urbervilles
(1891), and slightly later in Conan Doyle’s
Hound of the Baskervilles
(1902). On ‘magic pictures’, see Kerry Powell, ‘Tom, Dick and Dorian Gray: Magic Picture Mania in Late Victorian Fiction’,
Philological Quarterly
62 (1982), 147–70; on the role of ‘revelatory’ portraits in Gothic fiction, see Mighall,
A Geography of Victorian Gothic Fiction
(1999), Chapter 3.

20
Maudsley,
Pathology of Mind
(1895), 48.J. F. Nisbet, a popularizer of scientific ideas, had made a similar observation in 1889 when he discussed the principle of ‘throwing back’: ‘Every good quality and every defect that may have existed in any of our forefathers since the reign of Queen Elizabeth is liable to be revived in ourselves The recurrence of physical character after the lapse of centuries is attested by portraits, but moral character of a normal kind… can scarcely be traced beyond the third generation’ (Nisbet,
Marriage and Heredity
(1889), 106–7).

21
Henry Maudsley, the major British exponent of what was called ‘degeneration’ theory, published
Responsibility in Mental Disease
in 1874. Maudsley was a materialist who argued that criminals were largely a product of their hereditary makeup, or were (evolutionary) throwbacks to more primitive forms of humanity. These ideas, deriving from French ‘alienists’ of the mid-nineteenth century, came into prominence in its last decades. Maudsley published articles on ‘Heredity in Health and Disease’ in the
Fortnightly Review
(1886), the same journal in which a number of Wilde’s own essays appeared. Wilde himself was diagnosed as a formof‘degenerate’ when he appeared in Max Nordau’s great pantheon of the pathological,
Degeneration
(1892), which appeared in English in 1895 and helped provide a diagnostic sub-text to journalistic comment on Wilde’s case at the Old Bailey, despite the fact that Nordau had not even hinted at Wilde’s sexuality, at least not in the first edition.

22
‘The Critic as Artist’,
Complete Works
(1994), 1137.

23
And even this aspect is subjected to scientific scrutiny by Dorian. As he reasons: ‘Had it indeed been prayer that had produced the substitution? Might there not be some curious scientific reason for it all? If thought could exercise its influence upon a living organism, might not thought exercise an influence upon dead and inorganic things?’ (Chapter VIII).

24
The first quote is from Acton,
The Functions and Disorders of the Reproductive
Organs
(1865), 67; the second from Spitzka, ‘Cases of Masturbation (Mastur-batic Insanity)’ (1888), 34, 52; the third from Tiss ot,
A Treatise on the Diseases Produced by Onanism
(1760; 1832), 51, 86. On this literature, its ‘Gothic’ elements and its possible contribution to
Dorian Gray
, see Mighall (1999), Chapter 5.

25
Complete Works
(1994), 1082, 1091.

26
ibid., 1106.

CHRONOLOGY
1854
Oscar Fingal O’Flahertie Wilde born (he added ‘Wills’ in the 1870s) on 16 October at 21 Westland Row, Dublin.
1855
His family move to 1 Merrion Square in Dublin.
1857
Birth of Isola Wilde, Oscar’s sister.
1858
Birth of Constance Mary Lloyd, Wilde’s future wife.
1864
Wilde’s father is knighted following his appointment as Queen Victoria’s ‘Surgeon Oculist’ the previous year. Wilde attends Portora Royal School, Enniskillen.
1867
Death of Isola Wilde. 1871– 4 At Trinity College, Dublin, reading Classics and Ancient History.
1874–8
At Magdalen College, Oxford, reading Classics and Ancient History (‘Greats’).
1875
Travels in Italy with his tutor from Dublin, J. P. Mahaffy.
1876
First poems published in
Dublin University Magazine.
Death of Sir William Wilde.
1877
Further travels in Italy, and in Greece.
1878
Wins the Newdigate Prize for Poetry in Oxford with ‘Ravenna’. Takes a double first from Oxford. Moves to London and starts to establish himself as a popularizer of Aestheticism.
1879
Meets Constance Lloyd.
1881
Poems
published at his own expense; not well received critically.
1882
Lecture tour of North America, speaking on art, aesthetics and decoration. Revised edition
of Poems
published.
1883
His first play,
Vera; or, The Nihilists
performed in New York; it is not a success.
1884
Marries Constance Lloyd in London, honeymoon in Paris and Dieppe.
1885
Moves into 16 Tite Street, Chelsea. Cyril Wilde born.
1886
Vyvyan Wilde born. Meets Robert Ross, to become his lifelong friend and, in 1897, his literary executor. Ross might have been Wilde’s first homosexual lover.
1887
Becomes the editor
of Lady’s World: A Magazine of Fashion and Society,
and changes its name to
Woman’s World.
Publication of‘The Canterville Ghost’ and ‘Lord Arthur Savile’s Crime’.
1888
The Happy Prince and Other Tales
published; on the whole well-received.
1889
‘Pen, Pencil and Poison’ (on the forger and poisoner Thomas Griffiths Wainewright), ‘The Decay of Lying’ (a dialogue in praise of artifice over nature and art over morality), ‘The Portrait of Mr W.H.’ (on the supposed identity of the dedicatee of Shakespeare’s sonnets) all published.
1890
The Picture of Dorian Gray
published in the July number of
Lippincott’s Monthly Magazine;
fierce debate between Wilde and hostile critics ensues. ‘The True Function and Value of Criticism’ (later revised and included in
Intentions
as ‘The Critic as Artist’) published.
1891
Wilde’s first meeting with Lord Alfred Douglas (‘Bosie’).
The Duchess of Padua
performed in New York. ‘The Soul of Man Under Socialism’ and ‘Preface to Dorian Gray’ published in February and March in the
Fortnightly Review.
The revised and extended edition of
The Picture of Dorian Gray
published by Ward, Lock and Company in April.
Intentions
(collection of critical essays),
Lord Arthur Savile’s Crime and Other Stories
and
A House of Pomegranates
(fairy-tales) published.
1892
Lady Windermere’s Fan
performed at St James’s Theatre, London (February to July).
1893
Salome
published in French.
A Woman of No Importance
performed at Haymarket Theatre, London.
1894
Salome
published in English with illustrations by Aubrey Beardsley; Douglas is the dedicatee.
The Sphinx,
a poem with illustrations by Charles Ricketts, published.
1895
An Ideal Husband
opens at Haymarket Theatre in January; it is followed by the hugely successful
The Importance of Being Earnest
at St James’s Theatre in February. On 28 February Wilde returns to his club, the Albemarle, to find a card from Douglas’s father, the Marquess of Queensberry, accusing Wilde of ‘posing as a somdomite’ (sodomite). Wilde quickly takes out an action accusing Queensberry of criminal libel. In April Queensberry appears at the Old Bailey and is acquitted, following a successful plea of justification on the basis that Wilde was guilty of homosexual behaviour. Wilde is immediately arrested, after ignoring his friends’ advice to flee the country. In May he is tried twice at the Old Bailey, and on 25 May sentenced to two years’ imprisonment with hard labour for ‘acts of gross indecency with another male person’. In July he is sent to Wandsworth Prison. In November he is declared bankrupt, and shortly afterwards transferred to Reading Gaol.
1896
Death of Wilde’s mother, Lady Jane Francesca Wilde (‘Speranza’).
1897
Wilde writes the long letter to Douglas that would be later entitled ‘De Profundis’. In May Wilde is released from prison, and sails for Dieppe by the night ferry. He never returns to Britain.
1898
The Ballad of Reading Gaol
published pseudonymously as C.3.3, Wilde’s cell-number in Reading Gaol. Wilde moves to Paris in February. Constance Wilde (who had by now changed her name to Holland) dies.
1899
Willie (b. 1852), Wilde’s elder brother, dies.
1900
In January Queensberry dies. By July Wilde himself is very ill with a blood infection. On 29 November he is received into the Roman Catholic Church, and dies on 30 November in the Hotel d’Alsace in Paris.
1905
An abridged version
of De Profundis,
edited by Robert Ross, published.
1908
The
Collected Works,
edited by Robert Ross, are published.
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