de Profundis
By Oscar Wilde
Kessinger Publishing
Copyright © 2005
Oscar Wilde
All right reserved.
ISBN: 9781417900503
Preface
by Richard Ellmann
De Profundis is a kind of dramatic monologue, which constantly
questions and takes into account the silent recipient's supposed
responses. Given the place where it was written, Wilde might have
been expected to confess his guilt. Instead he refuses to admit that
his past conduct with young men was guilty, and declares that the
laws by which he was condemned were unjust. The closest he comes to
the subject of homosexuality is to say, impenitently, that what the
paradox was for him in the realm of thought, sexual deviation was in
the realm of conduct. More than half of De Profundis is taken up by
his confession, not of his own sins, but of Bosie's. He evokes two
striking images for that young man. One is his favorite passage from
Agamemnon, about bringing up a lion's whelp inside one's house only
to have it run amok. Aeschylus compared it to Helen, Wilde to
Douglas. The other is Rosencrantz and Guildenstern, who have no
realization of Hamlet's tragedy, being "the little cups that can
hold so much and no more."
The main theme of self-recrimination is that he did not break with
Bosie. But his letter is an attempt to restore relations. And while
he admits to "weakness," he explains the weakness as due to his
affection, good nature, aversion to scenes, incapacity to bear
resentment, and desire to keep life comely by ignoring what he
considered trifles. His weakness was strength. The gods, he has
discovered, make instruments to plague us out of our virtues as well
as our vices.
Wilde acknowledges that along with good qualities, he was "the
spendthrift of my own genius." But he passes quickly over this
defect, and those that attend it. Much of De Profundis is an elegy
for lost greatness. As he whips his own image, he cannot withhold
his admiration for what that image was. Elegy generates eulogy. He
heightens the pinnacle from which he has fallen:
I was a man who stood in symbolic relations to the art and culture
of my age. I had realised this for myself at the very dawn of my
manhood, and had forced my age to realise it afterwards.... Byron
was a symbolic figure, but his relations were to the passion of his
age and its weariness of passion. Mine were to something more noble,
more permanent, of more vital issue, of larger scope.
The gods had given me almost everything. I had genius, a
distinguished name, high social position, brilliancy, intellectual
daring: I made art a philosophy, and philosophy an art: I altered
the minds of men and the colours of things: there was nothing I said
or did that did not make people wonder: I took the drama, the most
objective form known to art, and made it as personal a mode of
expression as the lyric or the sonnet, at the same time that I
widened its range and enriched its characterisation: drama, novel,
poem in rhyme, poem in prose, subtle or fantastic dialogue, whatever
I touched I made beautiful in a new mode of beauty: to truth itself
I gave what is false no less than what is true as its rightful
province, and showed that the false and the true are merely forms of
intellectual existence. I treated Art as the supreme reality, and
life as a mere mode of fiction: I awoke the imagination of my
century so that it created myth and legend around me: I summed up
all systems in a phrase, and all existence in an epigram.
Continues...
Excerpted from de Profundis
by Oscar Wilde
Copyright © 2005 by Oscar Wilde.
Excerpted by permission.
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