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De Profundis and Other Writings
De Profundis and Other Writings | Oscar Wilde
16 posts | 7 read | 3 to read
'I have nothing to declare,' Wilde once told an American customs official, 'except my genius.' A good part of that genius is evident in the essays and poems included in this volume. There is the intellectual genius of The Soul of Man under Socialism, in which he clearly foresaw the dangers of economic bureaucracy and state-worship: for Wilde socialism meant liberation and individuality, not enslavement. Then there is the emotional genius of De Profundis, the long, introspective and often hostile letter he addressed to Lord Alfred Douglas from prison. And there is the poetical genius of The Ballad of Reading Gaol, in which Wilde's generous nature could movingly express for another's misery the sorrow he found it hard to express for his own. This collection contains, too, many examples of that humorous and epigrammic genius which captured the London theatre and which, by suddenly casting light from an unexpected angle, widened the bounds of truth.
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cant_i'm_booked
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Pickpick

Perhaps Im first entering into Wilde‘s works at an odd time, reading his famous prison prose De Profundis, written at the nadir of his career, before encountering any of the dramatic works that first made him a literary giant. But Im happy to get to know an older, more subdued Wilde who writes w/ humility but also (I think) no apology, acknowledging any past vices only so that they are swept aside to accommodate his spiritual awakening.

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catiewithac
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Pickpick

First 5⭐️ read of the year! This has been on my bookshelf for 20 years waiting for the right moment. Penguin no longer makes this exact volume which also includes 2 essays and random poems. De Profundis itself is the standout out here. It‘s just the best expression of how it feels to be a human being. The love, the hurt, the hope, the raw. It‘s one of my gospels now, because love is all and everything in this life. 🌈

BarbaraBB Intrigued by your review. 4y
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catiewithac
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“Love is fed by the imagination, by which we become wiser than we know, better than we feel, nobler than we are: by which we can see life as a whole: by which and by which alone we can understand others in their real as in their ideal relation.”

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GatheringBooks
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TracyReadsBooks
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Tagged book was the favorite in a busy reading month. 28 books total—heavy on graphic novels & fantasy. Some other favorites...Blind Assassin was brilliant & I highly recommend it. Sad to see Gert‘s rampaging come to an end but I liked the way IHF wrapped up. Fence gets better & better. Spinning Silver did not disappoint (& the writing!), Night Angel trilogy is excellent fantasy. Finally, two interesting & informative nonfiction reads.

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TracyReadsBooks
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Pickpick

This edition collects letters dealing with legal & family matters, a 50,000 word letter to his lover Lord Alfred Douglas, 2 letters about life in prison sent to British newspapers (contents of which remain relevant today), & The Ballad of Reading Goal, the last thing Wilde ever wrote. There is self-pity, anger & bitterness throughout but there is also passion, intelligence, beauty, & much more. A fascinating, highly recommended read. Excellent.

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TracyReadsBooks
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Words which are still relevant today. (From a letter Wilde wrote to a newspaper about the treatment of children in prison.)

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TracyReadsBooks
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“With freedom, books, flowers, and the moon, who could not be happy?”

Jabberwocky I LOVE THIS QUOTE 6y
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TracyReadsBooks
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“Love can read the writing on the remotest star...”

Louise I‘ve heard such great things about De Profundis. How are you liking it so far? 6y
TracyReadsBooks @Louise Oh wow, I have so many thoughts. The writing is exquisite—beautiful, passionate, angry, bitter, compulsively readable & more. It offers, as you may know, a fascinating look at Wilde‘s relationship with Alfred Douglas and how Wilde himself views/understands it while he languishes in prison. I definitely recommend it if you are at all interested in Wilde or the era. So I guess the short answer is I really like it! 😂 6y
Louise @TracyReadsBooks You write about it with the same passion as a friend of mine in Scotland, so it‘s going much higher on my TBR, though I might wait for the colder months to read something with that intensity! 6y
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TracyReadsBooks
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TracyReadsBooks
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TracyReadsBooks
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TracyReadsBooks
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“Life has at last become to me as real as a dream.”

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TracyReadsBooks
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One of our vacation stops was Newport, RI where we saw the ‘Bohemian Beauty: The Aesthetic Movement and Oscar Wilde‘s Newport‘ exhibit at Rosecliff. Interestingly, several other books I‘ve read since returning home referenced Wilde (including the fun & fluffy My Oxford Year). So naturally I decided it was time, having only read (and loved) The Picture of Dorian Gray, to read more by Wilde. Next up, his prison writings.

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CharissaWeaksAuthor
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🐝 H A P P Y.

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GoneFishing

The final mystery is oneself. When one has weighed the sun in the balance, and measured the steps of the moon, and mapped out the seven heavens star by star, there still remains oneself. Who can calculate the orbit of his own soul?