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30 Apr 2008

oscar wilde - the most celebrated victim of an anti-gay law

The life story of playwright and poet Oscar Wilde, who is today widely celebrated as an artist persecuted for his homosexuality, is being told in Wilde starring Stephen Fry and Jude Law. The movie will be shown at a Gala Fundraiser on May 13 to benefit Indignation, Singapore's gay pride season.

"People who do these things must be dead to all sense of shame, and one cannot hope to produce any effect upon them. It is the worst case I have tried... 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."

In 1895, Oscar Wilde was convicted of 'gross indecency' under a UK law that was the precursor of Singapore's infamous Section 377A. Bottom pic: Wilde (left) with his lover Lord Alfred Douglas (photo circa 1893) from whom the phrase "the Love that dare not speak its name" originated.
With that pronouncement, the judge sentenced Oscar Wilde in 1895 to two years' imprisonment with hard labour.

The law in this case was the Labouchere amendment of the Criminal Law Amendment Act, passed by the UK Parliament in 1885 that made a crime of "gross indecency." Singapore's Section 377A (Malaysia has a similar law) is descended from this law.

The case of Oscar Wilde was the most celebrated in the decade. It scandalised Britain, with rumours implicating a cabinet minister, and made him a household name through much of Europe and America, providing to this day a salutary lesson on the effects of anti-gay laws.

Wilde was already famous before the trials - there were three in quick succession. Since the late 1880s, he had become well known for his novel The Picture of Dorian Gray and his sell-out plays, such as Lady Windermere's Fan and The Importance of Being Earnest. Prior to that, he had been an art critic and had travelled around Britain and the US giving lectures on art and esthetics, albeit to no great success. Nor were his early plays, but eventually he found his voice, inventing single-handedly the form known as social comedy - plays filled with quick witty dialogue that poked fun at the manners, prejudices and hypocrisy of the upper classes.

He himself had displayed these verbal qualities for 20 years. One could always rely on him for a cutting repartee. It was a period when it was fashionable for men to be flamboyant, especially if one was involved in the theatre or the arts; Wilde's exaggerated personality stood out from his peers only by a matter of degree. However, he was also rather full of himself and could be disagreeably thoughtless, arrogant and stubborn.

Uranian tendencies

There is nothing to indicate that Wilde was aware of his "uranian tendencies" (in the language of the day) when he married Constance Lloyd in 1884. Wilde was 30, and the bride, 26, and they would have two sons soon after. He loved them deeply, but within three years of the marriage, the first homosexual affair had occurred, with 17-year-old Robert Ross who had moved into the Wilde family's house at Tite Street to stay three months while his single mother went abroad. He was preparing for his Cambridge entrance exam and might have been tutored by Wilde.

The biographer Barbara Belford noted that the same year, 1887, Wilde's most prolific period as a writer began, with the older man feeling at last "liberated, happy to be alive."

After Ross, Wilde began to explore London's underground homosexual scene. At first, Wilde relied on friends to introduce him to good-looking young men including one John Gray, a civil servant by day and a talented poet in his spare time. John Gray would inspire the character Dorian Gray in Wilde's 1889/1890 story of hedonism and eternal youth.

It would be another young man however, Lord Alfred Douglas, who would become the centre of Wilde's love-life. Nicknamed "Bosie," this very handsome 22-year-old was introduced to Wilde by a mutual friend in 1891, but it wasn't until the following year before the relationship got serious. Bosie was hardly an innocent boy; he had been sexually active during his schooldays and even during the time with Wilde, he was the more sexually outgoing of the two.

By this point, Wilde had become famous as a dramatist, and this might have got to his head, for he and Bosie made no effort to be discrete about their affair. Just about all their friends knew, though it is unlikely that Constance did, for Bosie was often welcomed to the Wildes' London townhouse or their vacation home in Torquay.

Within months, this affair had become a subject of blackmail. It happened when Bosie gave away one of his coats to an acquaintance, who found inside a pocket some letters from Wilde, one of which suggested a sexual relationship. Copies of this letter soon circulated and while Wilde bought the original back, he could not be so sure of the copies. In fact, one of them would later surface at his trials.

Despite outward appearances and undeniably deep emotional attachment, Wilde's relationship with Bosie was tumultuous. The younger man was willful and temperamental, sometimes returning Wilde's rather idealistic love with cruelty. In any case, they were sexually incompatible, both preferring young men. Intimacy between them petered out into a platonic friendship well before the trial and both had been largely looking to third parties for sex. Bosie, an advocate for sexual freedom, was the more reckless, leaving parties with beautiful young men in hand and even going to the East End, then a very low class area. Wilde preferred to have his rentboys discretely arranged by Bosie's friend, Alfred Taylor.

An irate father

Bosie's relationship with his father was strained, to say the least. The Marquess of Queensberry was a gruff and demanding man and when he found out about Bosie's relationship with Wilde, began to harass the latter to end it, often prowling the playwright's favourite restaurants looking for him. On one occasion, Queensberry intruded into Wilde's Tite Street home.

On 18 February 1895, Queensberry went to Wilde's club looking for him, but as he was not there, Queensberry left his name card with the porter, adding by hand the words, "To Oscar Wilde, posing as a somdomite [sic]". When Wilde saw this card on February 28, he decided that he had cause to make a police report against Queensberry for libel, since the older man had defamed him with those words to a third person - the porter.

And so it was Wilde who initiated the legal process, though understandably, he was sick of being harassed and persecuted by Queensberry, whose state of mind was now very unpredictable.

Queensberry's eldest son and Bosie's brother, Francis, Viscount Drumlanrig, had died the year before. Explained as a hunting accident, word circulated that it was actually a suicide and that Drumlanrig had had a romantic relationship with Lord Rosebery, the foreign minister (later Prime Minister. Having two sons the subject of scandalous gossip was perhaps too much for the man to bear. Around the same time, Queensberry's short-lived second marriage also came to an end - not by a divorce, but by an annulment on grounds that he was impotent.

Friends advised Wilde not to pursue the libel case against Queensberry since it might involve having to lie that he was a homosexual. But Wilde was determined to go ahead.

The trial opened on 3 April 1895 to a packed courtroom. Queensberry's barrister, Edward Carson, was well prepared, armed as he was with statements by a number of rentboys whom Wilde had been familiar with. Carson named three - Parker, Scarfe and Conway - in his opening statement. In the end, he didn't even have to produce them in court, for merely through cross-examination of Wilde himself, Carson was able to demonstrate that Wilde could have had no reason for meeting so often with these 18 to 20-year-olds other than sexual intimacy.

When the prosecution threw in the towel, abandoning the libel case, Wilde was left open to the charge of gross indecency as the statements that Carson had from the rentboys were deposited with the police and could be used against him. He was arrested the same day that his libel case collapsed.

Despite damaging evidence given by rentboys Fred Atkins, Charles Parker and William Parker and other witnesses, the second trial failed to produce a unanimous verdict from the jury, and so another one had to be convened.

The third trial began on 22 May with the same witnesses and letters in evidence but what was different about this trial was that the prosecution was led by none other than the Solicitor-General, Sir Frank Lockwood himself. It was quite extraordinary for such a senior representative of the Crown to take the lead, and in a case that didn't even involve murder or treason, and it suggested that the Crown was determined to obtain a conviction in order to make an example of Wilde. Why should that be? Word went around that Queensberry blackmailed Rosebery that he would reveal details of his affair with his son Drumlanrig if Wilde was not put away.

Wilde's most productive period was cut short by this turn of events; he never wrote a play again. His genius, however, outlived his persecutors, and the freedom to be true to our sexual selves, as he resolutely believed by the end of his life, is now seen as a moral right.

Tickets for the gala premiere are priced at $20 (US$15) and $50 (US$38) - the latter includes a cocktail reception - and are available online at www.fridae.asia/wilde.

Singapore

讀者回應

回應#1於被作者刪除。
2. 2008-05-01 10:13  
OoooooVerated!!!
Can't they find somebody who lived in the previous century?

I thought Anwar Ibrahim is the Most Celebrated Victim.

And can't they find someone else other than Jude Law?
3. 2008-05-01 10:17  
Oh... I didn't realise he wrote Picture of Dorian Gray.
Maybe it was initially titled Picture of Dorian Gay.

Skip the book guys, go for the 80s movie production. Superb stuff. Basically he almost died when the picture was put in an airtight safe. I think he died when some kerosene spilled over the painting and rendering the paint a bloody mess.

回應#4於被作者刪除。
回應#5於被作者刪除。
回應#6於被作者刪除。
7. 2008-05-01 13:39  
Thank you Alex for this superbly written and perfectly documented article on Oscar Wilde. I've been fascinated by the man, his works and destiny since I was 18, during my first year in University. I took up Political Science and was devouring the Picture of Dorian Gray when I was supposed to read Locke, Tocqueville and John K. Galbraith, lol.
It's hard enough to try and discover the "truth" about anyone (including oneself of course) but when that person has become emblematic in so many ways it turns out to be a near impossible task. I read all of Wilde's writings - which don't amount to very much quantity-wise - and my advice to fresh Wilde fans is to read as many books about Wilde as they can lay their hands on, because those will tell them a lot more on him, directly or indirectly, than his own production (with two notable exceptions, see below).
He was perfectly aware of that and once stated apparently without a trace of bitterness, that he had put "(his) genius into his life and only (his) talent into (his) work". Indeed I remember being thrilled, like the rebellious teenager that I was, when I read the endless stream of blas and outrageous witticisms uttered by Lord Henry Wotton in "The Picture of Dorian Gray". However when I read the book again some ten years later I found it strained and laboured in style, slow and academic in construction, all too often predictable in its outrageouness, and ultimately shallow in the underlying argument. This, however, did not in the least alter my opinion that Wilde was a genius, and that's because in the meantime I had read all his biographies (the most complete, accurate, objective and brilliant of which is Richard Ellman's "Oscar Wilde", Oxford University Press, 1987 - I'm convinced that all Wilde scholars will agree with me there).
In the mid 90s I also had the chance to see a theater performance in Coventry called "the trials of Oscar Wilde", a remarkably accurate and moving piece based on the record of the trials themselves, in the course of which Wilde proved to be totally different from what the public would have imagined at the time. He certainly didn't come out as the shallow, amoral and effete coward his opponents expected him to be. He made statements about his sexual preferences and on the contradictions in Victorian morals and society that showed enormous courage in those days, a courage for which he eventually paid the dearest possible price.
For such a man, going through the ordeal of an early XXth century jail for two years is beyond imagination. In the process he lost all his friends. But after all, what are true friends for, other than abandoning you in foul weather ? He could have said that! However if you read his "Ballad of Reading Gaol" and the amazing "De Profundis" you will find (almost) no trace of bitterness. Those two books are, not surprisingly, totally different from the rest of his work, and they certainly make up for the shortcomings in his other writings.
Because of (and certainly not despite) all his imperfections, I've loved and admired Oscar Wilde ever since I first heard of him. His sense of humour and repartee are legendary - they will make people laugh (and ponder) for many years to come, I'm sure. He spent the last months of his life in a hotel near the Academie des Beaux Arts on the Paris left bank where arts and ideas were thriving at the time. He couldn't afford to pay for the room any more but the owner let him stay anyway. Wilde thanked him yet again for his generosity and added : "I'm dying like I've lived. Beyond my means..."
8. 2008-05-02 09:50  
The 'funny' thing is, you can easily see the same case coming up in PRESENT day Singapore with it's society of bigots.
9. 2008-05-03 19:07  
so its 1885 in poor sin - i thought that there was time difference
10. 2008-05-05 09:38  
wow, great article and classy events this year! hurray!

a man known for his merits that outshine his fantastic journey . .. glad his legacy lives on! . . .
回應#11於被作者刪除。
12. 2008-05-05 13:59  
One of his witticisms I found to be very true :p

"Fashion is a form of ugliness so intolerable that we have to alter it every six months"

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