Read The Picture of Dorian Gray Online
Authors: Oscar Wilde
21
Henry Maudsley, the major British exponent of what was called âdegeneration' 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 âalienists' of the mid-nineteenth century, came into prominence in its last decades. Maudsley published articles on âHeredity 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 formofâdegenerate' 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
âThe Critic as Artist',
Complete Works
(1994), 1137.
23
And even this aspect is subjected to scientific scrutiny by Dorian. As he reasons: âHad 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, âCases 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 âGothic' elements and its possible contribution to
Dorian Gray
, see Mighall (1999), Chapter 5.
25
Complete Works
(1994), 1082, 1091.
26
ibid., 1106.
1854 | Oscar Fingal O'Flahertie Wilde born (he added âWills' 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 âSurgeon Oculist' the previous year. Wilde attends Portora Royal School, Enniskillen. |
1867 | Death of Isola Wilde. 1871â 4 At Trinity College, Dublin, reading Classics and Ancient History. |
1874â8 | At Magdalen College, Oxford, reading Classics and Ancient History (âGreats'). |
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 âRavenna'. 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 ofâThe Canterville Ghost' and âLord Arthur Savile's Crime'. |
1888 | The Happy Prince and Other Tales published; on the whole well-received. |
1889 | âPen, Pencil and Poison' (on the forger and poisoner Thomas Griffiths Wainewright), âThe Decay of Lying' (a dialogue in praise of artifice over nature and art over morality), âThe 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. âThe True Function and Value of Criticism' (later revised and included in Intentions as âThe Critic as Artist') published. |
1891 | Wilde's first meeting with Lord Alfred Douglas (âBosie'). The Duchess of Padua performed in New York. âThe Soul of Man Under Socialism' and âPreface 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 âposing 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 âacts 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 (âSperanza'). |
1897 | Wilde writes the long letter to Douglas that would be later entitled âDe 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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