The Secret Life of Oscar Wilde
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No one spoke, no one hardly dared to breathe. `The silence was so deep,' the Times reported, `that it could almost be felt.' As the foreman of the jury rose to deliver the verdict, Oscar's face was as `white as a miller's apron'. When the first of the seven verdicts of `Guilty' rang out, Oscar `clutched convulsively at the front rail of the dock':
His face became paler than before - if that was possible - his eyes glared and twitched from an unseen excitement within, and his body practically shook with nervous prostration, whilst a soft tear found a place in his eye.
There was a stunned silence after the verdict had been read, interrupted only by the heavy tread of Oscar's friend, Alfred Taylor, who had already been found guilty, as he climbed the wooden stairs that led directly into the dock. The judge, seventy-seven-year-old Mr Justice Wills, did not mince his words in passing sentence. `It is the worst case I have ever tried,' he said:
That you, Taylor, kept a kind of male brothel, it is impossible to doubt. And that you, Wilde, have been the centre of a circle of extensive corruption of the most hideous kind among young men, it is equally impossible to doubt. I shall, under the circumstances, be expected to pass the severest sentence the law allows. In my judgement it is totally inadequate for such a case as this. The sentence of the court is that each of you be imprisoned and kept to hard labour for two years.
There were a few gasps at the severity of the sentence and some loud cries of `Shame' from the public gallery. Oscar seemed temporarily stunned by the sentence. `And I?' he said hoarsely. `May I say nothing, my lord?' But Mr Justice Wills merely waved his hand dismissively to the warders who hurried the two prisoners down the stairs leading to the cells.
Later, Oscar and Alfred Taylor were taken by Black Maria to Pentonville, the first of three prisons where Oscar would serve his sentence. Oscar saw himself as a martyr to Love. He had chosen to go to prison rather than repudiate his love for Bosie and his love for men. `It is perhaps in prison that I am going to test the power of love,' he had written in his last, achingly beautiful letter to Bosie before his conviction. `I am going to see if I cannot make the bitter waters sweet-by-the intensity of love -I bear you.'
Towards the end of his sentence, from the silence and solitude of his prison cell in Reading Gaol -'this tomb for those who are not yet dead' - Oscar would reflect on the `scarlet threads' of his life that Fate had woven into so strange and paradoxical a pattern. And it was there, beneath the flaring gas jets in his small brick cell, that Oscar wrote, night after night, De Profundis, the great apologia for his life and for his love affair with Bosie.
`The two great turning points in my life,' he wrote, `were when my father sent me to Oxford, and society sent me to prison.' These two events were carefully chosen: they marked the beginning and the end of a long and eventful sexual odyssey, in the course of which he discovered the secret of his sexual nature and learned to speak its name with pride and with passion. His great journey from Oxford University to Reading Gaol took him twenty-one years, almost to the day. By May 1895, Oscar's love had come of age.
Wonder and remorse
`Oxford is the capital of romance ... in its own way as memorable as Athens.'
There was something different, even remarkable, about Oscar Fingal O'Flahertie Wills Wilde when he arrived at Magdalen College, Oxford in October 1874. He was certainly striking to look at. He was tall - taller than most of his contemporaries - and athletically built, though he always claimed to spurn exercise. And he looked rather younger than he really was, more like a gawky seventeen-year-old than a young man of twenty. His hair was dark and slightly wavy, rather longer than was usual, or indeed acceptable, causing several of his friends and fellow students to comment on it. It was `much too long', recalled G.T. Atkinson, and he wore it `sometimes parted in the middle, sometimes at the side, and he tossed it off his face'.
Oscar's face was large and pale and putty-coloured -'moonlike', Atkinson called it - with extraordinarily large and expressive greenish-yellow eyes of remarkable lustre and intelligence. His lips were dark and flat and rather noticeable, and his teeth were discoloured. But when he smiled or spoke or laughed, he radiated a captivating aura of geniality and openness. The novelist Julia Constance Fletcher, who met Oscar in Italy in 1877, described his expression as `singularly mild yet ardent'.
Oscar was different in another way. He was Irish, and his Irishness was evident from the mellifluous and delightful lilt in his voice, which, as the years in England multiplied, would virtually vanish. It was not uncommon for students from wealthy Anglo-Irish families to go to Oxford, but it was comparatively rare for a student with a discernible Irish accent to study there. It made him an outsider. `He did not come from an English public school, and so he was, in a way, detached from what is largely a continuance of school life and friendships,' Atkinson wrote perceptively. This sense of detachment and difference, of otherness and apartness, was with Oscar all his life. At Oxford and afterwards, he seemed to have as many enemies as he had friends, and, bewilderingly, his greatest friends could often turn abruptly into his deadliest enemies. Women liked him, and sometimes fell a little in love with him. Men, on the other hand, were often hostile, irrationally so.
Oscar's avowed lack of interest in games drove a wedge between him and many of his contemporaries. Sport - playing sport, watching sport, talking sport - was a major constituent of the social cement that bound Oxford men together. Many felt that there was something not quite right about a man who professed himself so profoundly bored with the subject of sport. And some found it distinctly odd that while Oscar ridiculed athleticism, he could at the same time profess his admiration for the bodies of athletes. - - - - - --- - - - - - - - - ----
Oscar's obvious intelligence and superior knowledge - and his willingness to demonstrate them - both attracted and repelled. It was galling that a man who boasted that he never did a stroke of work should be so successful academically. He was an accomplished and energetic talker, already among the best in Oxford. His talk was intelligent, articulate and incisive and, at the same time, allusive, imaginative, profound and richly poetic. Julia Constance Fletcher said he spoke `like a man who has made a study of expression', and, perhaps more importantly, listened like one accustomed to speak'.
Oscar had been studying the art of conversation ever since he was a child. He and his older brother, Willie, were allowed to sit at Sir William and Lady Wilde's large dinner table in their house in Merrion Square, Dublin, where the great, the good and the interesting assembled to talk. Sir William was a successful surgeon, as well as an acknowledged expert on Irish antiquities. His wife described him as `a Celebrity - a man eminent in his profession, of acute intellect and much learning, the best conversationalist in the metropolis, and author of many books, literary and scientific'. Lady Wilde had become famous in her youth as an ardent Irish nationalist and poet. Writing under the nom de plume `Speranza', she published revolutionary poems urging the Irish to rise up against the English oppressor. Oscar had continued his apprenticeship in the art of conversation at Trinity College, Dublin when he came into the orbit of the remarkable classical scholar, John Pentland Mahaffy. In a city of great talkers, Mahaffy was among the greatest, and he would go on to write The Principles of the Art of Conversation.
Oscar was different in another way too - a difference invisible to the naked eye, but nonetheless one that could be sensed, however imperfectly, by his contemporaries. By the time he arrived in Oxford he had almost certainly begun to experience within himself some vague, hard-to-pin-down feelings of warmth and attraction towards young men. But it was hard for him to isolate, define or articulate these faint emotional stirrings. All he knew was that, as time went by, they slowly, almost imperceptibly, resolved themselves into the first weak flutterings of something very like love.
How and when this long and sometimes painful process started is impossible to know, but it could well have begun when Oscar was sixteen - the time of his `sex-awakening', he told his friend, the journali
st, writer and celebrated womaniser, Frank Harris - and was about to leave Portora Royal School, the boarding school he and Willie attended near Enniskillen. Many years later, Oscar admitted that he had had some `sentimental friendships' with boys at Portora, one of which struck him as particularly significant. `There was one boy, and one peculiar incident,' he told Frank Harris towards the end of his life. Oscar had been very friendly with a boy who was a year or so younger. `We were great friends,' he said. `We used to take long walks together and I talked to him interminably.' On the day Oscar left Portora for the last time, his friend came to the railway station with him to say his goodbyes. As the Dublin train was about to depart, the boy suddenly turned and cried out `Oh, Oscar!':
Before I knew what he was doing he had caught my face in his hot hands, and kissed me on the lips. The next moment he had slipped out of the door and was gone.
Oscar was shocked and shaken. He became aware of `cold, sticky drops' trickling down his face. They were the boy's tears. Oscar was strangely affected by the experience. It was a kind of epiphany, a moment of revelation. `This is love,' he said to himself, trembling slightly. `For a long while I sat,' he told Frank Harris, `unable to think, all shaken with wonder and remorse.' This combination of wonder and remorse would characterise Oscar's complex and ambivalent attitudes towards his attraction to young men for many years to come.
There were no words that could accurately or adequately describe the feelings Oscar was beginning to experience in his first year at Oxford. Words like `sodomy' and `sodomite', derived from the Old Testament story of the city of Sodom which was destroyed by fire and brimstone because of the unnatural sexual practices of its inhabitants, did not apply. Oscar's feelings were emotional and were not - as yet - sexual. Any suggestion of sodomy, which in law explicitly meant anal sex, would have been utterly repugnant to him. Sodomy was taboo. It was the crimen tantum horribile non inter Christianos nominandum, `the too horrible vice which is not to be named among Christians', and was regarded, if anything, as more horrible than murder. In 1828, in the lifetimes of Sir William and Lady Wilde, the penalty for sodomy had been increased from imprisonment to death, and was reduced to penal servitude for life only in 1861. When, in 1895, the Marquis of Queensberry publicly accused Oscar of being `a ponce and sodomite', it was the worst insult that could be thrown at a man.
Nor could Oscar describe himself or his feelings as in any way `homosexual', as the term had been coined only five years earlier in Germany by Karl Maria Kertbeny, and would not come into common usage in English until the turn of the century. By the time he went up to Oxford, Oscar could only invoke the concept of `Greek love' to define his feelings for young men. As an outstanding Greek scholar, he would have known all about the tradition of friendship -'the romantic medium of impassioned friendship', as he described it in his Commonplace Book at Oxford - between men and boys which was accepted as natural in ancient Greece.
Greek love was much on Oscar's mind in 1874. Before he went up to Oxford, he spent several weeks helping his friend and mentor Mahaffy with his forthcoming book, Social Life in Greece, which was the first book to contain a frank discussion of the phenomenon. Mahaffy took the bull by the horns, though he was careful to frame the discussion in conventional moral terms. Greek love was, he said:
that strange and to us revolting perversion, which reached its climax in later times, and actually centred upon beautiful boys all the romantic affections which we naturally feel between opposite sexes, and opposite sexes alone.
`These things are so repugnant and disgusting that all mention of them is usually omitted in treating of Greek culture,' he wrote. Nevertheless, Mahaffy believed that it was worthwhile examining the social context of the `peculiar delight and excitement felt by the Greeks in the society of handsome youths'. Though Greek love could sometimes lead to `strange and odious consequences', it was, more often than not, a friendship of `purity- and refinement'. Oscar's exact role in Mahaffy's book is not known, though some have detected his youthful voice raised for the first time in defence of Greek love in the sentence: `As to the epithet unnatural, the Greeks would answer probably, that all civilisation was unnatural.' Mahaffy certainly paid generous tribute to `my old pupil Mr Oscar Wilde of Magdalen College' for his `improvements and corrections all through the book'. Oscar reciprocated. Mahaffy was `my first and my best teacher', Oscar said many years later, `the scholar who showed me how to love Greek things'.
At Oxford, the word `Greek' began to creep into Oscar's vocabulary, invariably to describe youthful male beauty, present and past. There was Armitage, `who has the most Greek face I ever saw', the athlete Stevenson, whose `left leg is a Greek poem', the poet Keats's `Greek sensuous delicate lips', and Harmodious, `a beautiful boy in the flower of Greek loveliness'. When he was a student, Oscar began to write poetry in earnest, and many of his poems written in Oxford invoke and celebrate great male lovers from Greek history and mythology. For the time being, at least, Oscar's Greek feelings towards other young men were spiritual and emotional, more than sexual. But, in the course of his four years at Oxford, the `purity and refinement' of his Greek feelings gave way to a frankly more erotic interest in young men, and would soon result in the `strange and odious consequences' that Mahaffy had spoken of. It was not long before there was unpleasant gossip. In October 1875, Oscar's friend John Bodley recorded in his diary that people were saying that 'old Wilde is a damned compromising acquaintance' and that he was in the habit of leaving `foolish letters from people who are "hungry" for him ... for his friends to read'.
A new word, brought over from Europe on the wind of intellectual change, entered Oscar's vocabulary halfway through his time in Oxford. `Psychological' came to mean men who loved men, and reflected the wave of new thinking in Germany, Austria and France that love and sex between men was a disturbance, a disease of the mind to be treated by the physician, rather than a crime to be punished by the courts. In Britain, the word became a kind of shorthand to refer to anything pertaining to love and sex between men. Oscar started to use `psychological' in this sense in 1876, in a letter to his Oxford friend William `Bouncer' Ward -'I want to ask your opinion on this psychological question' - about a love affair between an undergraduate and a boy. Another time, Oscar wrote that another Magdalen undergraduate, Cresswell Augustus Cresswell, or `Gussy', `is charming though not educated well: however he is "psychological" and we have long chats and walks'. Oscar also used the word `spooning' to describe the attachment between a fellow undergraduate at Magdalen and a younger boy, a Magdalen chorister. The word is redolent of boarding school crushes between older and younger boys, where sex may or may not have been involved.
Oscar may have actually had - or at the very least aspired to - some sort of relationship with a choirboy at Oxford. He started but never finished a sentimental poem entitled `Choir Boy' during his time at the university. And in 1876, or thereabouts, he wrote an untitled and remarkably homoerotic poem describing an assignation with a `lovely boy', quite possibly a choirboy, as Oscar makes a point of saying that the boy is possessed of a `throat as of a singing dove'. The poem opens with a quotation from Elizabeth Barrett Browning, 'Ali God, it is a dreary thing to sit at home with unkissed lips', and vividly describes how Oscar `went out into the night' and `waited under the lamp's light' for his boy to appear:
Oscar ended the poem by throwing down a gauntlet to those who would condemn his love for his `lusty- and fair' boy:
The poem was never finished and was to remain unpublished for well over a century. Oscar may have decided that it was too explicit, too revealing of his secret self. It is, of course, entirely possible that Oscar's passion for his `lovely' boy was chaste, that the delight he took in his beauty was just that: delight. The poet and writer John Addington Symonds, whom Oscar greatly admired and eventually started a correspondence with, had also fallen in love with a choirboy fifteen years earlier. Symonds was twenty-two when he fell in love with Alfred Brooke, the same age as Oscar at the time he wrote `Cho
ir Boy'. Symonds felt unable to express the love he felt for Alfred sexually:
I had been taught that the sort of love I felt for Alfred Brooke was wicked. I had seen that it was regarded with reprobation by modern society. At the same time I knew it to be constitutional, and felt it to be ineradicable. What I attempted to do in these circumstances was to stifle it so far as outward action went. I could not repress it internally any more than I could stop the recurrence of dreams in sleep or annihilate any native instinct for the beauty of the world.
After one or two snatched kisses and some furtive hand-holding, the affair with Alfred ended badly and left Symonds ill with a variety of alarming psychosomatic complaints. In his Memoirs, Symonds recalled how he attempted to `divert my passions from the burning channel in which they flowed for Alfred Brooke, and lead them gently to follow a normal course toward women'.
Symonds's attempt to channel his sexual desires for boys towards women may help to explain Oscar's several attempts to kindle love affairs with women. As with many of his contemporaries who shared his growing passion for other men, Oscar's path to erotic self-realisation was twisted and stony. In his published poems, he publicly celebrated the glories of Greek love, and in private he rhapsodised poetically over the physical charms of boys. Yet it seems that Oscar was able to successfully separate his sexual yearnings from his sexual identity. He could have sex with young men, and yet still cast himself as a conventional lover of women. And he could convince himself - even lie to himself - that his sexual contacts with men were of a different order to his sexual contacts with women. In the first place, sex with a man was not real sex. Real sex consisted of the act of coitus with a woman. It necessarily involved penetration. Sex with boys and with men rarely if ever, for Oscar at this time, involved penetration. There might be kissing, caressing and mutual masturbation. But fellatio and sodomy - or pedicatio as it was sometimes termed - were taboo. So Oscar could tell himself that, although what he might be doing gave him pleasure and satisfaction, it was not and could never be the same as real sex with a woman.