Ballad of Reading Gaol, (version 2)

Ballad of Reading Gaol, (version 2) Thumbnail
Authors:
Oscar Wilde
Abstract:
In 1895, Oscar Wilde was sentenced to 2 years of hard labor for acts of ā€˜gross indecencyā€™. During his time at Reading Gaol, he witnessed a rare hanging, and in the three years between his release and his untimely death in 1900, was inspired to write the following poem, a meditation on the death penalty and the importance of forgiveness, even for (and especially for) something as heinous as murdering oneā€™s spouse; for even the murderer, Wilde argues, is human and suffers more so for being the cause of his own pain, for ā€˜having killed the thing he lovedā€™; for everyone is the cause of someone elseā€™s suffering and suffers at the hands of another. It is this that Jesus Christ could see; he could continue to see the beauty of our humanity, despite all that we may do to each other, and encouraged us to love each other just the same

ā€œThe Ballad of Reading Gaolā€ was published in 1898 and would gain Wilde greater recognition as a poet (in addition to being a great playwright); although his only other volume of poetry, one of his earliest works that heā€™d published, was also well-received. Sadly, ā€˜The Balladā€™ would be his last.
(Summary by Linda Leu).
LibriVox (Audiobook):
Genres:
Poetry

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